Vancouver Now - FEBRUARY 12 to 28, VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA

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Norway's Northug golden in 50K, Canada's Kershaw 5th

Last Updated: Sunday, February 28, 2010 | 3:21 PM ET

Canadian cross-country skier Devon Kershaw missed winning a medal by about the length of ski in the men's classical 50-kilometre race at the Winter Olympics on Sunday.

Norway's Petter Northug, centre, and Germany's Axel Teichmann, right, sprint to finish line in the men's 50-kilometre mass start classic at Whistler Olympic Park on Sunday. Canada's Devin Kershaw, left, placed fifth. Norway's Petter Northug, centre, and Germany's Axel Teichmann, right, sprint to finish line in the men's 50-kilometre mass start classic at Whistler Olympic Park on Sunday. Canada's Devin Kershaw, left, placed fifth. (Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images)

The 27-year-old from Sudbury, Ont., finished fifth in the gruelling marathon of the Winter Games, in two hours 5:37.1 seconds, just 1.6 seconds behind the gold medal winner. It's the best-ever result for a Canadian in the event.

"One and a half seconds from gold … I'm going to leave this Olympics really proud of what we accomplished, but also you never know if you get another chance," an emotional Kershaw said after the race.

His finish highlighted a good performance by the men's team in the Callaghan Valley cross-country course west of Whistler Mountain, as the skiers have managed seven Top-10 finishes.

Norway's Petter Northug won gold using his trademark sprint to push past Axel Teichmann of Germany on the final straightaway.

Northug finished in 2:05.35.5 for his second gold medal of the Olympics.

Teichmann took the silver after coming in 0.3 seconds behind. Johan Olsson of Sweden took bronze, one second back.

An emotional Devon Kershaw, left, makes his way towards teammate George Grey following the his final race of the Games. Kershaw finished 6-tenths of a second off the podium. An emotional Devon Kershaw, left, makes his way towards teammate George Grey following the his final race of the Games. Kershaw finished 6-tenths of a second off the podium. (Jeff McIntosh/Canadian Press)

Kershaw looked strong through the first 40 kilometres of the race, skiing in the lead pack and conserving strength on the downhills.

His wax technicians appeared to have created some of the fastest skis among the 48 skiers who finished the race. At times Kershaw seemed to be flying past other racers in the downhills.

But in the end, the race came down to a thrilling sprint in the stadium, and the 27-year-old Kershaw was defeated by the world's best.

"I paced that race perfectly," he said. "I did everything exactly as planned and I got beat by four stronger skiers today."

George Grey, 30, of Rossland, B.C., also remained with the pack through much of the race, fading in the last 10 kilometres to 18th.

Alex Harvey, 21, of St.-Ferreol-les-Neiges, Que., wasn't pleased with his effort, saying he felt fatigue from earlier competitions. He placed 32nd. Ivan Babikov, 29, of Canmore, Atla., also struggled, placing 33rd.

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Medal Count

Top 10 Medal Winners

Country Total
UNITED STATES 9 15 13 37
GERMANY 10 13 7 30
CANADA 14 7 5 26
NORWAY 9 8 6 23
AUSTRIA 4 6 6 16
RUSSIA 3 5 7 15
SOUTH KOREA 6 6 2 14
CHINA 5 2 4 11
SWEDEN 5 2 4 11
FRANCE 2 3 6 11

Full Medal Standings

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Cross-Country Skiing Headlines

Breakout Games for Canada's cross-country men
Traditional Nordic powerhouses owned the cross-country skiing events at Whistler Olympic Park, with Norway winning nine medals and Sweden taking seven.
Norway's Northug golden in 50K, Canada's Kershaw 5th
Petter Northug of Norway captured the men's 50-kilometre cross-country race Sunday on the final day of competition at the Vancouver Winter Olympics.
Emotional Renner caps career in final race
Sara Renner of Canmore, Alta., who "caught the bug" as a 12-year-old when the 1988 Calgary Winter Games staged cross-country ski events in her hometown, wrapped up a celebrated career Saturday at age 33 in another Games in Canada.
Brian McKeever's Olympic dream over
The head coach of the Canadian cross-country ski team confirmed Saturday that legally blind skier Brian McKeever will not start Sunday's 50-kilometre mass-start classic race at the Vancouver Games, ending McKeever's dream of becoming the first Paralympic athlete to compete in the Winter Olympics.
Coach made right call on McKeever
The easy decision would have been to let Brian McKeever race. The easy decision, for Dave Wood, the Canadian cross-country team coach, would have been the politically correct one to make. The easy decision would have been a disaster.

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