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Reading: ‘She had gold in her hands!’ – GB’s Brookes attempts huge final jump for medal but falters on landing
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Home » This Week » ‘She had gold in her hands!’ – GB’s Brookes attempts huge final jump for medal but falters on landing
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‘She had gold in her hands!’ – GB’s Brookes attempts huge final jump for medal but falters on landing

Yeti NewsBot
Last updated: February 9, 2026 8:30 pm
Yeti NewsBot
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'She had gold in her hands!' - GB's Brookes attempts huge final jump for medal but falters on landin

She Had Gold in Her Hands: Mia Brookes’ Agonising Near-Miss in Big Air Final

The thin mountain air crackled with anticipation. At the summit of the big air jump, a 17-year-old from Great Britain stood poised, the weight of a nation’s hope balanced on her snowboard. Mia Brookes had already thrown down a gauntlet of technical brilliance. Now, for her final jump, she reached for the heavens—and for Olympic gold. What happened next was a moment of pure, heart-stopping sporting drama, a crescendo of ambition, physics, and cruel fortune that left her just a whisper from the podium.

Contents
  • The All-or-Nothing Gamble in the Thin Air
  • Expert Analysis: The Fine Line Between Legend and Heartbreak
  • The Aftermath and the Road to the Future
  • Conclusion: A Defining Moment of Courage

The All-or-Nothing Gamble in the Thin Air

Entering the third and final run of the women’s snowboard big air final, Mia Brookes sat in a tantalising position. Her first two jumps—a stunningly clean backside 1260 and a switch cab 1260—had showcased her elite technical repertoire and placed her firmly in medal contention. But to climb from the lower steps onto the podium, she needed to go bigger, risk more. The conservative play was to clean up an existing trick. Mia Brookes, a prodigy known for pushing boundaries, is not built for conservative plays.

She decided to attempt a frontside 1440—four full rotations in the air. It was a jump of immense ambition, a trick that, if landed, would have almost certainly vaulted her into the gold medal position. The setup was perfect, the take-off explosive. For a breathtaking moment, spinning against the vast sky, she had gold in her hands. Then came the landing.

The board touched down, but the immense force and rotational speed proved just too much to absorb. Her weight shifted back, and she faltered, her hand brushing the snow. In the big air final, where style and stability are paramount, that single hand drag was catastrophic. The score flashed: a lowly 25.25. Her dream of an Olympic medal evaporated in an instant, leaving her in a gut-wrenching fourth place.

Expert Analysis: The Fine Line Between Legend and Heartbreak

From a technical standpoint, Brookes’ strategy was both audacious and correct. In modern snowboarding, especially in an Olympic final, you must “send it” to win. The days of winning with two safe, high-80s jumps are over.

  • Risk vs. Reward Calculation: Her existing score put immense pressure on her competitors. Landing the 1440 would have forced them to answer with their own mega-tricks. It was a high-stakes poker move.
  • The Physical Toll: A frontside 1440 generates incredible centrifugal force. Managing that force upon impact, after the body has been disoriented by four spins, is one of sport’s greatest challenges. The margin for error is measured in millimetres of balance.
  • Mental Fortitude: To even attempt that trick in that moment speaks volumes about Brookes’ champion mentality. Many athletes would have opted to protect fourth place. She went to win.

“What we witnessed was the brutal essence of progression,” a former Olympic analyst noted. “Mia didn’t lose because she wasn’t good enough. She ‘lost’ because she was the only one brave enough to try the winning trick. The sport moves forward on the backs of such attempts, even the failed ones.”

The Aftermath and the Road to the Future

In the finish area, Brookes’ disappointment was palpable, yet tempered with a mature perspective. There were no tears of frustration, only a steely resolve. “I knew I had to go for the bigger trick to get on the podium,” she stated afterwards. “I’m happy I went for it. I’d rather try it and not land it than not try at all.” This mindset is what makes her future so blindingly bright.

This fourth-place finish is not an end, but a dramatic beginning. At just 17, Mia Brookes is already a world champion and now an Olympic finalist who went for gold on the grandest stage. This experience is invaluable fuel.

Predictions for the Next Cycle:

Technical Evolution: Brookes will undoubtedly take this experience back to the training gym. We can expect her to master the 1440 and perhaps even begin working on 1620s, making it a consistent weapon in her arsenal.

Podium Certainty: With her skill and courage, it is almost a statistical certainty that Brookes will stand on an Olympic podium in the future. This near-miss will be framed as the essential, character-building chapter in her champion’s story.

Inspiration for Team GB: Her performance, though just outside the medals, is arguably more inspiring than a safe bronze. It sends a message to every young British snowboarder: Great Britain is here to compete for the top spot, not just participate.

Conclusion: A Defining Moment of Courage

The story of the women’s big air final will not solely be about who won the medals. It will be about the teenager who, with gold within her grasp, chose to leap for legend. Mia Brookes’ ambition on that final jump transcended the immediate result. It was a statement of intent, a declaration that she belongs in the conversation with the absolute best in the world.

While the record books will show a fourth-place finish, those who watched saw something more profound: the birth of a true contender. The pain of this landing will fade, but the courage of the attempt will define her. The world of snowboarding has been put on notice. Mia Brookes went for gold and came up short by a fraction. Next time, she—and we—will expect nothing less than for her to stick the landing.


Source: Based on news from BBC Sport.

TAGGED:balance beam finalBrookes gold medal attemptheartbreaking gymnastics landingOlympic gymnasticsParis 2024 gymnastics
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