McMorris apologizes to Canadian teammate Parrot for questioning his slopestyle victory
Regina snowboarder told CBC Sports on Friday that he had 'the run of the day'
Slopestyle gold medallist Max Parrot said fellow Canadian snowboarder Mark McMorris has apologized for saying Parrot only won because of questionable Olympic judging.
McMorris finished third, 2.43 points behind Parrot, close enough that he would have taken silver if the judges had dinged Parrot for the missed grab. McMorris told CBC Sports on Friday he deserved to beat Parrot and Chinese silver medallist Su Yiming.
"Obviously would have been nice to have a different shade of medal. But knowing that I kind of had the run of the day and one of the best rounds of my life and the whole industry knows what happened — pretty, pretty crazy," McMorris said.
Parrot said McMorris apologized to his face Saturday morning. McMorris also tweeted to say he was sorry later in the day.
I let my emotions get the better of me in the days following slopestyle and I want to sincerely apologize to Max. I’m amazed by what you’ve overcome and I’m extremely proud to have shared the podium with you. Let’s get another one for <a href="https://twitter.com/TeamCanada?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@teamcanada</a><br><br>🙌🏼❤️🇨🇦🥇🥉 <a href="https://t.co/Ygzkn7jEW6">pic.twitter.com/Ygzkn7jEW6</a>
—@markmcmorris
Parrot said there were no hard feelings over McMorris' comments.
"He actually came to me earlier today and he apologized for his non-sportsmanship," Parrot said. "I told him no worries."
WATCH | McMorris' and Parrot's runs, side by side:
McMorris declined to be interviewed Saturday.
Parrot and McMorris are set for another showdown Monday, when qualifying begins for big air. The event will be scored by the same nine-judge panel that was immediately criticized at Genting Snow Park on Monday after broadcast replays clearly showed Parrot grabbing his knee instead of his board.
Parrot said the judging process needs an adjustment. He advocated for judges to have more access to slow-motion replays and bemoaned that panels are rushed into decisions because of time constraints created by television broadcasts.
"They probably missed a lot of other things as well on other riders' runs that day," Parrot said. "But you know, I understand the focus is on me, as I've won."
Single big mistake vs. multiple smaller ones
Parrot got his gold about three years after beating cancer, but the feel-good story was quickly undercut by the controversy around his first trick.
The 27-year-old Parrot said he briefly had a hand on his board during his jump, but that it slipped off. He ended up grabbing his knee instead, an error akin to taking an extra step, or falling, in a gymnastics floor routine.
After winning, Parrot found replays of Su's and McMorris' runs. He said he spotted three "little mistakes" during McMorris' turn, and also noted a few errors by Su.
"I didn't have any mistakes on five of the six features," Parrot said. "And on the one jump, I had a bigger mistake. And yeah, I definitely say that it's a big mistake to not be able to hold the grab for the whole time.
"But how do you compare that? One big mistake versus multiple, small mistakes over the most technical run? That's why it's a judged sport."