Eileen Gu says she's disappointed she can't get help with her packed Olympic schedule
After Eileen Gu secured her spot in the Olympic big air final, she said she was disappointed that Games organizers wouldn’t make accommodations to allow her the same amount of training as the rest of the skiers in her third and final event, the halfpipe
LIVIGNO, Italy (AP) — After Eileen Gu secured her spot in the Winter Olympics big air final Saturday, she said she was disappointed that Games organizers wouldn't make accommodations to allow her the same amount of training as the rest of the skiers in her third and final event, the halfpipe.
Gu, who won silver in slopestyle earlier in the week, joins Henry Sildaru of Finland as the only freestyle skier signed up for all three disciplines — slopestyle, halfpipe and big air. The big air final Monday overlaps with the first of three, three-hour halfpipe training sessions for that event scheduled later next week.
The 22-year-old Gu, one of the biggest names at the Milan Cortina Games, told reporters she reached out to organizers at the International Ski Federation (FIS), which determines the schedule.
She said she wasn't asking for special treatment, just the same as everyone else was getting, and she even looked for compromises, like joining the snowboarders' training on the halfpipe. They said they couldn't make a change for one athlete because it wouldn't be fair to the rest.
“I’m disappointed in FIS,” Gu said. “I think the Olympics should epitomize aspiration, and I think being able to do something that’s beyond the ordinary should be celebrated instead of punished.”
FIS officials did not immediately return a message from The Associated Press seeking comment.
Gu — who was born in the United States but competes for China — hasn't skied on a halfpipe since a World Cup event in December. She hasn't competed in big air since winning the gold medal in the discipline four years ago in Beijing. That was part of her three-medal haul in China — something she's on track to repeat in Italy.
Big air and slopestyle are essentially cousins — the big jumps on the big air course aren't unlike the three big jumps in slopestyle. But halfpipe is a different and more dangerous undertaking. Of Gu's 20 World Cup victories, 15 have come in that event.
“Halfpipe is an entirely different event,” Gu said. “It's like sprinting and a marathon. They're both running but they're completely different sports.”
At the last Olympics, Gu's slopestyle contest ended a few hours before halfpipe training began. She chowed on a chive pancake at the bottom of the hill as she wound her way through interviews, then hurried back up the lift to start training for the third part of her Olympic journey.
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This time, Gu came close to not having to worry about the scheduling conflict. She fell during her second jump in big air qualifying, turning the last attempt into an all-or-nothing jump to make the final. It was similar to what happened in slopestyle and, just as in slopestyle, she came through.
“Even though I haven't done it in four years, I still know how to ski,” she said. “I still know my body and I can still do flips, and I'm not really thinking about a medal, or any color of medal.”
She is, however, thinking about her schedule — which will be breakneck with or without that first halfpipe training session.
After Monday's big air final, the halfpipe qualifiers are Thursday. The final is Saturday. It means Gu will headline the last of the 25 medal events scheduled in the action-sports park.
“I think it’s really unfair. I think it’s punishing excellence, to be completely honest with you,” Gu said. “Because I dare to do three events, and this is making it completely impossible to train fairly for the third event.”
Associated Press writer Joseph Wilson contributed to this report.
Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
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