The gold medal from nowhere

Zoi Sadowski-Synnott displays the gold medal she won in snowboard slopestyle yesterday. Photo:...
Zoi Sadowski-Synnott displays the gold medal she won in snowboard slopestyle yesterday. Photo: Snow Sport NZ
She barely got an hour’s notice, but Wanaka snowboarder Zoi Sadowski-Synnott just topped an Olympic medal.

The 17-year-old outdid the bronze medal she picked up at the Winter Olympics last year in Korea by becoming New Zealand’s first snowboarding XGames winner yesterday, when she came from nowhere to win the slopestyle event.

She described it yesterday as "Insane ... beyond my wildest dreams."

Late on Friday night [NZ time] she claimed the snowboard big air silver.

Sadowski-Synnott had started off at the beginning of the week as being the second reserve in the slopestyle.

But Austrian Anna Gasser pulled out a few days before the competition and then barely an hour before the competition started, Slovakia’s Klaudia Medlova withdrew, giving the Wanaka athlete a chance at glory at Aspen.

The second rider to drop into the course, Sadowski-Synnott stomped her first run with back-to-back 900s and a double wildcat to score 90 points from a possible 100.

Zoi Sadowski-Synnott on her way to glory at the X Games in Aspen yesterday. Photo: Getty Images
Zoi Sadowski-Synnott on her way to glory at the X Games in Aspen yesterday. Photo: Getty Images
Holding the top spot after run one but knowing seven of the world’s best athletes would be chasing hard, Sadowski-Synnott looked to tidy up her trick execution, and was able to up her score to a 91 on her last run.

United States snowboarder Hailey Langford came close to toppling Sadowski-Synnott, recording 90.66 on the final run.

An Otago Daily Times Class Act recipient last year, Sadowski-Synnott was on cloud nine after the win.

"The X Games for us snowboarders is the best of the best, an invite-only which has been around so long.

"Doing this today means so much to me, probably a career highlight. I honestly came here this week just wanting to get a feel for the X games — I was only in the big air at that point and focusing on that."

She would now move on to the World Championships in Utah in 10 days time, and the victory has opened up invitations to other events.

Her father Sean said yesterday her coach Mitch Brown had told them just before the event that Zoi was exhausted, but was hoping to go out and give it a crack.

Obviously she did.

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