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Angry snowboarders hit out at 'dangerous' Olympic final

Pyeongchang: Angry snowboarders said the "dangerous" women's slopestyle final at the Pyeongchang Olympics should have been cancelled after vicious winds caused a string of crashes on Monday.
Nearly all the athletes, including American winner Jamie Anderson, tumbled at some point at the frigid Phoenix Park, where strong winds forced Sunday's qualifiers to be scrapped and also delayed the final for more than an hour on Monday.
It was the latest event at the Games to be disrupted by the swirling wind, with the prestigious men's downhill skiing moved to Thursday.
None of the snowboarders suffered major injury, but the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and International Ski Federation (FIS) faced questions as to why the final was not shelved.
The FIS admitted that conditions were "challenging" but defended the decision to go ahead with the event, saying the safety of the athletes was their top priority. Enni Rukajarvi mastered the conditions better than most and took bronze behind defending champion Anderson and Laurie Blouin of Canada, but the Finn said her achievement had been overshadowed.
"Most happy that no one got hurt really bad," she said.
Asked whether it had been the right decision to hold the event, she replied: "It wasn't. It was better in the practice, but then it got really bad, so they should have cancelled it or moved it."
The 27-year-old added: "The weather was bad and too dangerous and I got a lot of wind in my run, so that was bad, too. I had a fall and hurt my chin a little bit so it wasn't too nice."
On Sunday, 17-year-old Tess Coady, the youngest member of the Australian team in South Korea, was forced out of the Games after wrecking her left knee in training.
Coady blamed the weather and Austrian rival Anna Gasser said: "So many people got hurt because of the wind already."
Gasser, who finished 15th, called the competition "a lottery" and said: "I don't think it was a fair competition and I'm a little disappointed in the organisation that they pulled through with it.
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