Humphries narrowly misses bobsleigh gold in St. Moritz | CBC Sports - Action News
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Humphries narrowly misses bobsleigh gold in St. Moritz

Kaillie Humpries and pilot Melissa Lotholz were one one-hundredth of a second short of a gold medal Saturday at the bobsleigh World Cup in St. Moritz, Switzerland.

American sleds take gold, bronze

Humphries, Lotholz finish one one-hundredth of a second shy of gold

8 years ago
Duration 3:12
The Canadian bobsleigh pairing of Kaillie Humpries and Melissa Lotholz finished one one-hundredth of a second behind the leader on Saturday, settling for silver in St. Moritz, Switzerland.

KaillieHumphriesand brakeman Melissa Lotholz were one one-hundredth of a second short of a gold medal Saturday at the bobsleighWorld Cup in St. Moritz, Switzerland.

Humphries and Lotholzearned silver with a total time of two minutes, 16.15 seconds behind Americans Elana Meyers Taylor and BriaunaJones' 2:16.14. Jamie Greubel Poser and Lauren Gibbs of the United States finished third.

Kaillie Humphries misses out on gold by fraction of a second

8 years ago
Duration 0:34
Kaillie Humphries misses out on gold by fraction of a second

"I don't think I have actually ever lost a race by one-hundredth of a second before," Humphries said in a press release. "This stings a bit, but we still came away with the silver."

"This will keep us hungry, and it will push us not to become complacent. We will take the positives from this race and not dwell on losing but such a small margin."

The medal marks Humphries' return to the World Cup podium after a frustrating fifth-place finish in Winterberg, Germany. The two-time Olympic gold medallist will also compete in Sunday's four-manevent.

"We had the fastest push times today so that was really exciting," Lotholz said. "Kaillie and I have spent two years chasing these American girls down and to walk away from today with the fastest pushes is very rewarding."

"Yes we wanted the gold, but when we got to the bottom I was insanely happy knowing I hopped in the sled having pushed well."

In the men's event, Germany'sJohannes Lochner and Christian Rasp rode a track record to the top of the podium, ahead of fellow countrymen Francesco Friedrich and Martin Grothkopp and AmericansSteven Holcomb and Carlo Valdes.

Chris Spring and Neville Wright were the top Canadians in 14thwhile Nick Poloniato and Derek Plug placed 19th. Justin Kripps and Jesse Lumsden did not qualify for the final, finishing 21st.

You can catch more bobsleighand skeleton coverageon Saturdayat 4p.m. ET onRoad to the Olympic Games, our weekly show spotlighting the best high-performance athletes from Canada and around the world.