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Canada wins 26th Olympic medal as Beijing Games end with closing ceremony

Click to play video: 'Beijing Olympics: Canada brings home 26 total medals as Games end'
Beijing Olympics: Canada brings home 26 total medals as Games end
WATCH: It was a Winter Olympics plagued by COVID-19 fears, political controversies and yet another Russian doping scandal. The Beijing games themselves led to some great results for Canadian athletes, bringing home 26 total medals: 4 gold, 8 silver, and 14 bronze. Ross Lord reports – Feb 20, 2022

Canada’s Justin Kripps already knew what it felt like to step onto an Olympic podium. But his teammates didn’t, and he wanted to share that experience with them.

That was a motivating factor for Kripps, who piloted his crew to a bronze medal in four-man bobsled on the final day at the Beijing Games – Canada’s last medal of the Olympics.

The 35-year-old Kripps, who won gold in the two-man bobsled at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games, held onto third place by six-hundreths of a second.

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The bronze was a first Olympic medal for Ryan Sommer of White Rock, B.C., Cam Stones of Whitby, Ont., and Ben Coakwell of Moose Jaw, Sask.

“It means the world to me to have these three guys in the sled with me, and now they’re Olympic medallists,” said Kripps, of Summerland, B.C.

“I came into these Games with an Olympic medal already, and this team that has just been grinding for four years, been together for four years, and for it to culminate in an Olympic medal is just amazing.”

Click to play video: 'Beijing Olympics: Canada takes home silver and bronze in freeski halfpipe, silver in speed skating'
Beijing Olympics: Canada takes home silver and bronze in freeski halfpipe, silver in speed skating

Kripps piloted his crew to an overall time of three minutes 55.09 seconds at the Yanqing National Sliding Centre, well behind the gold and silver winners from Germany.

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The Canadians were third after the first two heats on Saturday. They started the fourth heat with a slim edge over Germany’s Christoph Hafer and hung on for the podium appearance.

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“When you cross that finish line, all of a sudden you’re aware of how much pressure there was,” Kripps said. “So in that moment, it felt amazing to have accomplished it.”

Chris Spring of Priddis, Alta., finished ninth overall.

The bronze was Canada’s second bobsled medal of the Games – Christine de Bruin of Stony Plain, Alta., won bronze in the monobob.

It was also Canada’s 26th medal overall, closing out an out-of-the-ordinary Beijing Olympics highly influenced by the COVID-19 pandemic both during the sporting event and in the months leading up to it.

Those 26 medals – four gold, eight silver and 14 bronze – put Canada fourth in the total medal table behind Norway (37), Russia (32) and Germany (27). The Canadians finished ahead of the United States (24).

Canada’s four gold was its lowest total of top-podium finishes since Lillehammer 1994.

“Let’s not gloss over how difficult these last two years were for Team Canada, that in my estimation had to endure the most restrictive COVID protocols of any nation,” said David Shoemaker, the Canadian Olympic Committee’s chief executive officer.

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Click to play video: 'The story of an Edmonton woman’s journey to the Olympics'
The story of an Edmonton woman’s journey to the Olympics

Three of Canada’s 26 medals were won by Ottawa’s Isabelle Weidemann, who was named Canada’s flag-bearer for Sunday’s closing ceremonies.

The long-track speedskater won a complete set of medals in Beijing, including the country’s very first medal of the Games: bronze in the women’s 3,000 metres.

The 26-year-old followed that up with silver in the 5,000 metres. She finished with gold in the team pursuit alongside teammates Ivanie Blondin and Valerie Maltais.

Bookending her Games by leading Canada into Bird’s Nest Stadium was the perfect finish.

“It’s never been something that I even thought I’d be able to do,” Weidemann said on the flag-bearer honours. “These Games have been so, so incredible. And I feel like every day, we’re piling on more and more and I haven’t quite processed it all. I’m having a lack of words and a lack of emotions and I have no tears left, I’ve cried at every event now.

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“I really look forward to kind of being able to go home and reflect on everything that’s happened.”

Click to play video: 'Historic Canada-U.S. rivalry takes centre stage in women’s Olympic hockey final'
Historic Canada-U.S. rivalry takes centre stage in women’s Olympic hockey final

It was an otherwise quiet final day for Canada.

Cendrine Browne of Saint-Jerome, Que., finished 16th in the women’s cross-country 30-kilometre mass start, the country’s second-best performance in the event.

The 28-year-old was one position away from tying Canadian record holder Sara Renner, who finished 15th in the mass start at the Vancouver Games in 2010.

“It’s my best performance ever and one of the best Canadian results. I’m speechless,” said Browne.

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Her teammate Katherine Stewart-Jones from Chelsea, Que., achieved what is now tied for the third-best Canadian result, coming in 30th.

Dahria Beatty of Whitehorse finished 39th. Laura Leclair of Chelsea was 51st.

Earlier at the Yanqing National Alpine Skiing Centre, the Canadian ski team failed to challenge for a medal in the mixed team parallel event.

Erin Mielzynski of Collingwood, Ont., Erik Read of Canmore, Alta., Cassidy Gray of Invermere, B.C., and Calgary’s Trevor Philp lost to Slovakia in the 1/8 final.

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