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Netherlands, Norway dominate

The Dutch and the Norwegians show off their skates and skis

SOCHI, Russia

The Norwegian women revived their cross country skiing dominance at the Sochi Olympics on Saturday, and the Dutch added two more speedskating gold medals to their record haul.

Marit Bjoergen won her sixth career gold medal by leading a Norwegian sweep in the women’s 30-kilometer cross-country race. A week ago, Norway’s heavily favored women’s relay team finished a disappointing fifth, touching off a mini-crisis in the ski-crazed Scandinavian country.

The Netherlands won both men’s and women’s team pursuit races in speedskating, giving the Dutch eight gold medals out of 12 events and 23 total in the sport. That’s two more golds than the Soviet Union won in speedskating in 1960, the previous record, and 10 more than East Germany’s 1988 total medals mark.

In hockey, six-time Olympian Teemu Selanne scored two goals to help Finland rout the United States 5-0 in the game for bronze. Finland has won four medals in the last five Olympics, more than any other nation in the NHL era.

Elsewhere, Russia won the 4x7.5-kilometer men’s biathlon relay to take its games-leading 11th gold medal; Mario Matt of Austria won gold in the men’s slalom; Vic Wild of Russia captured his second gold by winning the Olympic debut of men’s parallel slalom snowboarding; and Julia Dujmovits of Austria won the women’s snowboarding race.

On Day 16, the Sochi Olympics also was hit by two more doping cases. Cross-country skier Marina Lisogor, 30, of Ukraine became the third athlete to test positive for banned substances in two days. The International Olympics Committee later announced that Latvian hockey player Vitalijs Pavlovs tested positive for the stimulant methylhexanamine after his team’s loss to Canada in the quarterfinals Thursday.

Cross-Country Skiing

Bjoergen now is the most decorated female Winter Olympian in history with 10 total medals and six gold.

Therese Johaug took silver in the 30-kilometer race, while Kristin Stoermer Steira completed the Norwegian sweep by winning bronze.

Speedskating

The Dutch men’s team of Jan Blokhuijsen, Sven Kramer and Koen Verweij set an Olympic record of 3 minutes, 37.71 seconds in the team pursuit. The Netherlands also held the old record of 3:39.95, set in Vancouver four years ago.

South Korea took the silver and Poland the bronze.

In the women’s race, the Netherlands’ trio of Marrit Leenstra, Jorien ter Mors and Ireen Wust also set an Olympic record of 2:58.05.

Poland took silver and Russia bronze.

Alpine Skiing

Matt’s victory in the men’s slalom makes him the oldest Alpine champion in Olympic history. Matt, who will turn 35 in April, surpassed now-retired Norwegian great Kjetil Andre Aamodt as the oldest skier to win an Alpine race.

Biathlon

Russian anchor Anton Shipulin beat Germany’s Simon Schempp on the final lap to give the host nation its first biathlon gold of the Sochi Games. The 4x7.5-kilometer relay was the last biathlon competition at the Games.

Defending champion Norway led for most of the race but dropped to fourth after anchor Emil Hegle Svendsen missed three targets in his final shooting.

Germany got the silver and Austria the bronze.

Snowboarding

The American-born Wild, who became a Russian citizen in 2011 after marrying Russian snowboarder Alena Zavarzina, won gold in parallel giant slalom earlier this week. Wild and another adopted Russian, former South Korean short track speedskater Viktor Ahn, have won five of Russia’s 11 gold medals in Sochi.

Zan Kosir of Slovenia took silver behind Wild, and Benjamin Karl of Austria won bronze.

In the women’s parallel slalom, Dujmovits edged Anke Karstens of Germany at the finish. Amelie Kober of Germany won bronze.

Ice Hockey

The 43-year-old Selanne and Jussi Jokinen scored 11 seconds apart early in the second period to give Finland the advantage, then the Finns scored three goals in the third period against an American team that looked like it would rather be at home.

Canada and Sweden will face off Sunday for the gold, the Winter Games’ final gold medal.

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