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Soule Takes Biathlon Bronze

Written by USSA on 14 March 2010.

WHISTLER OLYMPIC PARK, BC – U.S. Adaptive Cross Country athlete Andy Soule (Pearland, TX) made history Saturday, winning the first U.S. medal of the 2010 Paralympic Games and the first-ever medal for the U.S. Paralympic Biathlon team on the opening day of competition. Soule, a retired U.S. Army veteran, combined his shooting skills learned in the Army with his cross country skills learned from the U.S. Adaptive Cross Country Team to win the bronze medal.

“After I passed [Sergey] Shilov, I just hammered it and didn’t look back,” said Soule. “It felt just incredible. I’ve had World Cup wins and World Cup podiums before, but there’s nothing quite like this – in this atmosphere, in front of the crowd here with everyone watching.”

Top-ranked Irek Zaripov of Russia won gold with a time of 9:51.00, while Ukraine’s Iurii Kostiuk crossed the finish line +47.9 for silver. Soule, who entered competition ranked fourth overall in International Paralympic Committee World Cup points, posted a final time of 10:53.01.

“It was a great race,” said U.S. Adaptive Cross Country and Biathlon Paralympic Head Coach Greg Rawlings. “He went into it with a great attitude and just started reeling people in. He missed one and went around the penalty loop, but didn’t stress it. He just kept going and cleaned it on the final. I think his brain switched right there and he figured out that he was in the game. He was able to pick people off one at a time until he was at the line.”

In the women’s standing 3 km pursuit, USA’s Kelly Underkofler (St. Paul, MN.) finished +14:39.0 for ninth place overall. Russia’s Anna Burmistrova won gold with a time of 11:24.01.

“I’m definitely disappointed, but I skied my best and I shot pretty well,” said Underkofler. “I knew I had to ski fast and try not to get caught. Ukraine’s Oleksandra Kononova started 20 seconds behind me and passed me on the first loop, which is amazing. So I was bumped back a spot and that’s where I finished, which is not exactly where you want to be.”

Biathlon competition continues at Whistler Olympic Park on Wednesday with the men’s sitting 12.5 km, women’s sitting 10 km, men’s and women’s standing 12.5 km, and men’s and women’s visually impaired 12.5 km events.

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