BEIJING — Joey Mantia missed out on an Olympic medal by .002 of a second. Mia Manganello Kilburg's margin wasn't quite so minuscule, but she also finished in fourth place on a day of near-misses by the U.S. speedskating team at the Beijing Olympics.
As for Giorgia Birkeland, she couldn't have been prouder of her race, even though she wasn't quite as close to the podium. Birkeland, of White Bear Lake, finished 12th Saturday in the women's mass start, reaching the finals at the Beijing Games in her first mass start race at the senior international level.
Mantia has called the mass start "NASCAR on ice,'' and it lived up to that nickname on the final day of speedskating in Beijing. The women's and men's races were packed with grabbing, pushing and jostling, punctuated by the occasional wipeout.
Bart Swings won the men's race, giving Belgium its first Winter Olympics gold since 1948. South Korea's Chung Jae Won and Lee Seung Hoon were second and third. Mantia lost the bronze by about an inch, and he said he felt he was pulled back by Lee as they reached the finish line.
Irene Schouten of the Netherlands won the women's race, with Canada's Ivanie Blondin second and Italy's Francesca Lollobrigida third.
Manganello Kilburg said the women's race was "extremely aggressive,'' even by the wild standards of the mass start. Birkeland agreed, though it hardly bothered her.
"It was honestly kind of crazy,'' Birkeland said. "The girls were super scrappy and super aggressive, but it was still super fun.
"To get through the semi was a good confidence booster, and to actually make [the finals] was really good. It meant a lot.''