ZHANGJIAKOU, CHINA — When Jessie Diggins began the anchor leg of the women's 4x5-kilometer relay on Saturday, Team USA trailed the leaders by 57.6 seconds.
That's a lot of lead to bite into. Diggins is good. But that good?
Germany and Russia were battling for first place. There was a second pack, closer to Diggins by around 30 seconds, of Finland, Norway and Sweden — a neighborhood brawl for bronze between three Nordic countries and cross-country skiing powers.
So Diggins, from Afton, put herself in lurking mode. She skied hard and was ready to pounce if any shenanigans broke out among the group to give her a sniff of a chance at stealing a bronze.
"I thought, you know, if I get lucky and they're messing around with tactics, there's a chance I can glom on the back," Diggins said.
The Nordic triumvirate didn't yield any ground. Diggins eventually backed off full throttle.
"Unfortunately, they did not [back off] as much as I had hoped, and then I definitely paid for it the second lap," she said. "I could not feel my legs at all, but I was really happy with it because I was like, you know what, you got to try."
Diggins on Saturday skied in her fourth event of the Beijing Olympics, with two more to go. In a sport in which competitors often collapse from exhaustion at the finish line, Diggins' supreme endurance and recovery powers are on display for the world to see.