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VANCOUVER, British Columbia: With the best ski jumper in the world on the sidelines, the Austrian team soared to the Olympic gold medal Monday at the Vancouver Games.
The German ski jumping team (L-R) Michael Uhrmann, Andreas Wank, Martin Schmitt and Michael Neumayer celebrate winning silver at the large hill team ski jumping event at the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics in Whistler, British Columbia, February 22, 2010. [Agencies]
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The Austrian team of Gregor Schlierenzauer, Thomas Morgenstern, Andreas Kofler and Wolfgang Loitzl defended their title from the 2006 Turin Games by earning 1,107.9 points to easily beat second-place Germany. Norway took bronze.
Simon Ammann, the Swiss ski jumper who won gold in both the normal hill and large hill individual jumps, didn't compete in the team event because Switzerland didn't have four jumpers.
Norway won the men's team sprint in cross-country skiing, with Petter Northug racing past Axel Teichmann of Germany shortly before the finish. Northug and Oeystein Pettersen won in 19 minutes, 1 second, while Germany was second and Russia third.
"It's like a dream for me to be an Olympic champion," said Northug, who had won only a bronze medal in Vancouver before Monday. "Today was the day."
In the women's team sprint, Claudia Nystad pulled away from Sweden's Anna Haag to give Germany the gold. The German team of Nystad and Evi Sachenbacher-Stehle won in 18:03.7. Haag and Charlotte Kalla took silver, and Russia was third.
"We did everything right and at the right time," Nystad said.
There was only one other medal to be awarded Monday, the 11th day of the Olympics, in figure skating's ice dance.
A day after the United States beat Canada in men's hockey - forcing the hosts to play an extra game to reach the quarterfinals - the women's hockey tournament resumed.
The Americans easily beat Sweden 9-1 to reach Thursday's gold-medal game, where they will face Canada, which beat Finland 5-0.
In curling, Norway reached the semifinals of the men's tournament after routing France 9-2 in a shortened eight-end game.
The Norwegians have been known for their diamond-patterned trousers at the Vancouver Games, and Thomas Ulsrud said he read a report that King Harald V of Norway would be coming to Canada to watch his team play at the Olympics.
The report went on to say the king would be delighted to accept a pair of the team's slacks - a blinding arrangement of red, white, blue and gray diamonds - because "they're the coolest pants I've ever seen."
"So, just because of some funny pants we get to hang out with the king of Norway and give him some pants and have him watch the game," Ulsrud said. "That would be just awesome."
In other matches, Kevin Martin kept the favored Canadians unbeaten through eight games with a 7-2 victory over the United States after facing an early deficit, Germany held off China 7-6 and Switzerland defeated Sweden 7-3 in nine ends after scoring three in the ninth.
The Canadian women rebounded from their first loss with a surprising 6-2 win over defending gold medalist Sweden.
In Whistler, bobsled officials said they will alter the profile of several tricky curves on the super-fast Olympic track, hoping the changes will make for safer and better racing.