Olympics-Biathlon-French entertainer Jacquelin finally finds freedom to be himself


Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics - Biathlon - Men's 15km Mass Start - Anterselva Biathlon Arena, South Tyrol, Italy - February 20, 2026. Emilien Jacquelin of France in action during the men's 15km mass start REUTERS/Pawel Kopczynski

ANTERSELVA, Italy, Feb 21 (Reuters) - French ⁠biathlete Emilien Jacquelin has lit up the Winter Games with his swashbuckling skiing and rapid-fire shooting, but ⁠perhaps even more important than winning medals is the fact that he was finally able to ‌be true to himself.

No-one who saw him compete at the Antholz-Anterselva Biathlon Arena could ever imagine that the brash 30-year-old might be plagued by self-doubt. Yet it was only at this Olympics - his third - that Jacquelin felt able to show his real self.

"I always say to French ​media, 'Yeah, this year, I really want to express myself', and then I ⁠don't, because I'm so afraid to do bad ⁠and I struggle, but this year I enjoyed every race," he told Reuters after his final event of the ⁠Games, ‌Friday's mass start.

The flamboyant Frenchman made the running early in that race but fell away after missing four of his five shots on a disastrous third visit to the range, and he eventually finished 12th, ⁠more than two-and-a-half minutes after winner Johannes Dale-Skjevdal of Norway.

Ever the entertainer, ​five-time world champion Jacquelin continued the ‌chase regardless.

"I tried so hard to do great and it was the opposite that happened, so after ⁠that, I knew that ​the race was over for me. I just enjoyed it with the crowd, with the (French team) staff. I tried to shoot really fast in the last one," he explained with a wry smile.

TRASH-TALKING WITH THE NORWEGIANS

There was alsoa bit of trash-talking out on ⁠the course as Jacquelin found himself alone against three Norwegians on ​the second lap.

"I felt that they wanted me to pass, and I was like, 'No man, you are three, I'm alone, please leave me alone and go on ... because I talked, Johannes (Dale-Skjevdal) told me, 'Oh, stay calm', and after that he was really ⁠fast, so I should have shut my mouth!" Jacquelin said.

With the earring of his sporting hero, deceased cycling legend Marco Pantani, shining in his ear, the raucous, knowledgeable crowd cheered Jacquelin as he bowed out of the Olympics with a gold medal in the relay and bronze in the pursuit race.

Jacquelin had left his first Olympics in 2018 ​empty-handed but picked up two relay silvers in Beijing four years later.

He was happy ⁠with his latest showing.

"No regrets, for sure - in a way, I would have loved to be Olympic champion in the ​sprint or pursuit, but being yourself and having these kinds of emotions, ‌like how I felt at these Olympics, I felt so ​much love from so many fans," Jacquelin said.

"And also with the Italian fans, thanks to Marco (Pantani), and this amazing story - it was a really emotional Olympic story."

(Reporting by Philip O'Connor; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)

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