Alex Gough, Canada's 1st Olympic luge medallist, slides into retirement

Alex Gough will have a farewell slide on her home track Saturday when Canada's most decorated luger announces her retirement.

Canadian will enjoy farewell run on home track in Calgary

Canadian luger Alex Gough celebrates her bronze medal at the 2018 Olympics. The Calgary native will have a final slide at her home track Saturday before retiring. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press)

Alex Gough will have a farewell slide on her home track Saturday when Canada's most decorated luger announces her retirement.

The 31-year-old Calgarian was the first Canadian to win an Olympic medal in luge when she claimed bronze in women's singles in February's Winter Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea.

That Olympic breakthrough preceded another two days later when Gough, Sam Edney, Justin Snith and Tristan Walker won silver in the team relay in Pyeongchang.

Gough was married in 2016 and is in her third year of civil engineering studies at the University of Calgary.

She hasn't raced this season. Gough will make her retirement run prior to Saturday's women's competition at a World Cup in Calgary.

"I'm just diving into everything that's coming next for me and I've been busy all summer, busy this fall," Gough told The Canadian Press. "I'm pretty at peace with the decisions that I made."

Snapping German dominance

In Canadian sliding sports, luge took a back seat while Canadians won Olympic medals in bobsleigh and skeleton through the 1990s and first decade of this century.

Canadians won an occasional World Cup medal in luge after the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, but Gough was the first to be a consistent medal threat and challenge Germany's domination.

She snapped a run of 105 consecutive wins by German women when she claimed her first World Cup victory Feb. 12, 2011 in Paramonovo, Russia.

Gough owns six world championship medals, including women's singles bronze in 2011 and 2013, team relay silver in 2013 and team relay bronze in 2012, 2015 and 2016.

She's won 27 World Cup medals in women's singles — including three gold — as well as another 16 World Cup medals in the relay with the doubles team of Walker and Snith and most often Edney as teammates.

"In a word, it's definitely a legacy," Snith said. "From the beginning of her career, she was always a fighter."

Tone-setter

Walker believes Gough's bronze in Pyeongchang paved the way for the relay silver.

"I don't think we would have medalled in the relay if she didn't medal in her race," Walker said. "It totally put the team into a mindset that was capable of winning."

Gough grew up in Calgary attending the National Sport School and training on the WinSport sliding track, which was the sliding venue for the '88 Winter Olympics in the city.

"Since she started winning medals, we have mostly girls in our program," Luge Canada executive director Tim Farstad said. "It can't be a coincidence.

"Young girls are saying 'Alex Gough, I want to go win medals like her.' From recruitment all the way up, we've seen a big increase in girls in the sport."

Gough's ascendency and that of her teammates coincided with Luge Canada's 2007 hiring of Wolfgang Staudinger from the powerhouse German system to be the head coach of the national team.

Edney also calls it quits

The Canadian team has also graduated 34-year-old Edney, who said in Pyeongchang the relay was his last slide.

Edney was the first Canadian man to claim a World Cup gold in 2015 when he was victorious in Calgary. He also collected a World Cup silver and a bronze in men's singles during his career.

The Canadians' successes were not without setbacks.

Gough, Edney, Snith and Walker all finished fourth in the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, just off the podium in women's singles, doubles and the team relay.

In the weeks before the 2018 Winter Games, they were briefly upgraded to relay bronze and dropped to fourth again when two Russians initially stripped of their 2014 results for alleged doping had that decision overturned by the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

Canada's luge team anticipated a breakthrough at home during the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver and Whistler, B.C.

The death of Nodar Kumaritashvili of Georgia in a pre-Games training crash at the Whistler Sliding Centre shocked the luge community and prompted the moving of the start houses to lower points on the track for those games, which negated the home-track advantage for the host team.