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Pittsford's Morgan Schild and other Americans unable to advance in mogul ski event

Drew Broderick

PYEONGCHANG, South Korea (AP & WXXI News)  Perrine Laffont put France in the medals column at the Winter Olympics, skiing through the bumps and snow to take the women's moguls title Sunday night.

The 19-year-old Laffont gave her country its first women's gold medal in the 26-year history of the event.

Justine Dufour-Lapointe of Canada finished second to add silver to the gold she took four years ago in Sochi. Yulia Galysheva of Kazakhstan, competing with a broken hand suffered last month at a contest in Utah, won bronze to give her country its eighth Winter Games medal since it started competing separately after the breakup of the Soviet Union.

The Americans had a rough night in the snow. None made the six-woman final, and top-ranked Jaelin Kauf was the best finisher, in seventh. Pittford’s Morgan Schild placed 15th.

Though Kauf and teammates Morgan Schild (15th) and Keaton McCargo (eighth) are older than Laffont, the champion came to Pyeongchang with something none of them had _ namely, Olympic experience. Laffont competed in Sochi as a 15-year-old and finished 14th.

She scored a 79.72 on a strong run through the steadily falling powder, keeping her knees glued together and pointing downward and landing both her jumps _ a 360-degree spin and a back flip with her skis crossed _ without a bobble.

She beat Dufour-Lapointe by more than two points. The Canadian's sister, Chloe, who joined Justine on the medals stand in Sochi by winning silver, came in 17th this time.

Laffont, meanwhile, puts her name on a list of Olympic moguls champions that includes Hannah Kearney and Jenn Heil on the women's side and Edgar Grospiron of France, who won the gold in the men's contest in 1992, the year moguls were introduced to the Olympic program.

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