Kingsbury wins 3rd straight dual moguls world title, holding off reigning Olympic champ

Mikaël Kingsbury of Deux-Montagnes, Que., successfully defended his men's dual moguls world title on Sunday in Bakuriani, Georgia, defeating Sweden's Walter Wallberg.

Canadian legend reaches finish line 5-100ths of second ahead of Sweden's Wallberg

Men's mogul skier, with his ski mask around his neck, holds gold medal to his mouth with his left hand and bites on the hardware at the world championships.
Mikaël Kingsbury of Deux-Montagnes, Que., made it three consecutive world titles in dual moguls on Sunday, edging Sweden's Walter Wallberg for his eighth career medal combined in the singles and dual events. (Alexis Boichard/Agence Zoom/Getty Images)

Mikaël Kingsbury checks into every moguls competition as the undisputed favourite — the man to beat.

That routine excellence was on display over the weekend with a gold-medal sweep in men's moguls at the freestyle world championships in Bakuriani, Georgia.

"I'm so happy to be an eight-time world champion," Kingsbury, 30, said as he sipped a celebratory beer while talking with Canadian reporters via video conference. "It's always my favourite thing crossing the finish line in a big event when you've done something good."

Good? Try great.

The Deux-Montagnes, Que. product is so dominant that he makes bigger headlines on the rare occasions he fails to demolish the field — much like sprinter Usain Bolt, swimmer Michael Phelps and quarterback Tom Brady in their time.

On Sunday, Kingsbury soared to the top of the podium in dual moguls, dispatching Sweden's Walterberg Wallberg 19-16 in the final.

WATCH | Canada's Kingsbury breaks a freestyle skiing record:

Canada’s Mikael Kingsbury breaks freestyle skiing record | The Moment

2 years ago
Duration 2:00
They don’t call him king of the moguls for nothing: Canadian Mikael Kingsbury breaks a freestyle skiing record after capturing his third consecutive world title in duel moguls at the freestyle world championships in Bakuriani, Georgia.

The win came 24 hours after he claimed gold in single moguls with a score of 89.82 in the super final, ahead of Australia's Matt Graham and Wallberg.

Not surprisingly, come Sunday, Kingsbury said he felt exhausted.

"After arriving in finals, I was like, 'OK, you got that much energy in the tank,"' he said, holding his thumb and his index finger centimetres apart. "'Let's empty the tank and push as hard as you can."'

And push he did, leaving no doubt about the identity of the best men's moguls skier in the world.

"I wanted to not leave anything on the table and push," said Kingsbury, who settled for silver at the 2022 Olympics in Beijing after a shocking final run for gold by Wallberg.

"If I learned something from the Olympics — it probably helped me for this event to go for it 100 per cent.

"And yeah. It was awesome."

'I believe in me, and I love competing'

Kingsbury defeated his compatriot Elliot Vaillancourt of Drummondville, Que., as well as Dylan Marcellini of the United States, to begin his day. He then bested Benjamin Cavet of France and Pavel Kolmakov of Kazakhstan to advance to the final.

This is the third gold-medal sweep for Kingsbury at the world championships, having already won both titles in 2019 and 2021.

"I believe in me, and I love competing," Kingsbury said. "I bet there's some people who get very nervous in competition. For me, it's important that I still feel a bit of emotion and stress at the top, because it means I care.

"But I'm just super focused."

In the big picture, Kingsbury is looking toward competing for at least another three years and suiting up for Canada at the 2026 Winter Games in the Italian cities of Milan and Cortina d'Ampezzo.

At age eight, Kingsbury started mogul skiing. By age 10, he printed off a colour picture of the Olympic rings and wrote "Je vais gagner" on the piece of paper, meaning "I'm going to win."

WATCH | Kingsbury earns 8th career world medal, 3rd in dual moguls:

Mikaël Kingsbury wins gold in world championships dual moguls competition

2 years ago
Duration 5:17
The Deux-Montagnes, Que. native defeated Sweden's Walter Wallberg in the final to place first in the event during the 2023 FIS freestyle world ski championships from the Bakuriani ski resort in Georgia.

He taped the paper on the ceiling above his bed — not knowing that he was staring every night at the words that would shape his destiny.

"The really great ones, like Mik, really take satisfaction in the daily pursuit of that kind of achievement, "said Peter Judge, CEO of Freestyle Canada. "He just has a hunger for the sport. He loves winning, but I think he loves doing the work to get there even more than that."

Mogul skiing is punishing on the knees, and Kingsbury has been navigating the bumps and jumps for more than two decades.

'Students of their own body'

But the opportunity to compete in two Olympic events — with the dual moguls event making its debut in 2026 — has Kingsbury determined to keep going for as long as he can.

"Look at a guy like LeBron James — or somebody like Mik — they become students of their own body," Judge said of Kingsbury, who won gold at the 2018 Winter Games and silver at the 2014 Winter Games. "They really understand how to get the most out of their body but also how to protect it.

"And that comes doing deep due diligence and having a real deep understanding of your own physical self and then also really listening to yourself — and not stepping into places where you might put it at risk, either by inaction or by overaction."

Gabriel Dufresne of Joliette, Que., also had an excellent Sunday in Bakuriani, defeating American Cole Macdonald 20-15 and Rasmus Karjalainen of Finland 22-13. However, he lost his quartefinal race to Kolmakov, 20-15.

Dufresne rounded out the top five for a career best result in the event.

Julien Viel of Lévis, Que., did not complete his run in the round of sixteen, and finished 16th, while Brenden Kelly of Pemberton, B.C., was 31st.

The World Cup moguls season concludes March 17-20 in Almaty, Kazakhstan. From there, Kingsbury will hit the gym back home in Quebec to prepare for the next campaign.

"I love the life that I live," Kingsbury said. "It's an amazing lifestyle. It's healthy. And I love competitions. And I know I've won everything. So why not win it two, three, four more times?"

In the women's competition, Maia Schwinghammer's day came to an end in her quarterfinal against Jaelin Kauf of the U.S. The Saskatchewan native finished the day eighth. Laurianne Desmarais-Gilbert of Sainte-Adèle, Que., was eliminated in the round of 16 and finished the event a personal best 10th.

Like Kingsbury, Perrine Laffont of France won a second gold medal in as many days in Bakuriani and is the most successful female moguls racer in history with five world championships.

Laffont defeated Jaelin Kauf in the super final and Avital Carroll of Austria completed the medal podium.

WATCH | Full coverage of men's and women's dual moguls from Georgia:

FIS freestyle world ski championships Bakuriani: Dual moguls

2 years ago
Duration 1:55:52
Watch the men's and women's dual moguls events at the 2023 FIS freestyle world ski championships from the Bakuriani ski resort in Georgia.

With files from CBC Sports

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