Justin Olsen

Craziest Finish Ever? Canada and Germany Tie in Thrilling 2-Man Bobsled

With a clutch, precise performances in their fourth and final runs, Justin Kripps of Canada and Francesco Friedrich of Germany led their sleds to gold in a razor-thin race

A tie. That's right. There was a tie for gold in the two-man bobsled on Monday in Pyeongchang as Canda and Germany tied after four runs of bobsled in a thrilling race.

With a clutch, precise performances in their fourth and final runs, Justin Kripps of Canada and Francesco Friedrich of Germany led their sleds to gold in a razor-thin race. Alexander Kopacz joined Kripps in the Canadian sled and Thorsten Margis joined Friedrich. 

Heading into the final run, only 0.13 seconds separated the top five spots -- and it somehow got closer in the final run. 

Oskars Melbardis piloted his Latvian sled to bronze with brakeman Janis Strenga. Team Germany, who impressed on this track in luge and skeleton, put three sleds in the top five after not winning a medal in bobsled in 2014.

Justin Olsen and Evan Weinstock finished as the top American team in 14th. Nick Cunningham and Hakeem Abdul-Saboor and Codie Bascue and Sam McGuffie finished 21st and 25th, respectively.

Justin Kripps’ sled took the lead after a near-flawless third run -- but the lead was only 0.06 seconds, and the four-time and reigning world champion sled piloted by Friedrich who just set a course record was in second. It was crowded and volatile at the top of the standings -- Nico Walther’s German sled, who led after two runs despite crashing across the finish line in Run 2, dropped from first to fifth on the third run. Walther's sled ended up fourth. 

Olsen led the top American sled despite undergoing an emergency appendectomy less than two weeks ago. He drove four solid runs to give the U.S. a top-15 finish. The other two American sleds didn't make the cutoff of the top-20 to compete in Run 4, ending their two-man competitions after Run 3. 

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The U.S. isn't done with competition yet, however. All three pilots and brakemen will be back in the four-man competition. Cunningham is excited to get back on the track. "Every trip, even though they weren't my best pieces of work, we learned a lot from it," he told NBC's Lewis Johnson. " I hate to learn it in a race, but we did, and it's going to prepare us going into four-man. My guys are fired up, and I'm really excited to get into four-man." 

Copyright NBC Olympics - Pyeongchang
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