Veteran French Para snowboarder Cécile Hernandez saw her podium dreams evaporate in the banked slalom at the 2026 Winter Paralympics after a baffling string of misfortunes on Friday the 13th, underscoring how even the most decorated athletes can be humbled by inexplicable bad luck.
CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — The stage was set for another triumph. Cécile Hernandez, a two-time Paralympic gold medalist and flag bearer for France, entered the women’s banked slalom SB-LL2 at the Milan Cortina Paralympics as a favorite. Instead, Friday the 13th delivered a nightmare cascade of errors that left her fourth on the podium and questioning the universe itself.
“It has been a (expletive) day since the start,” Hernandez confessed, as detailed by the Associated Press. “I lost my mouthguard, I spilled my coffee, we got the wrong board this morning because we forgot the board. It was just a succession of crazy things and I even wonder how I managed to finish third after the first run.” A series of mundane yet devastating mishaps—from forgotten equipment to simple accidents—accumulated to sabotage her performance before she even pointed her board downhill.
The emotional toll was immediate and raw. Hernandez appeared to be crying as she passed through the media zone, gesturing in frustration and disbelief at what had transpired. A French team member offered a consoling pat on the back, but the veteran was shattered. “I am someone who believes a lot in the universe and everything. And I tried to change the frequency of the universe,” she said. “I tried, but no. It’s Friday the 13th.” Her superstitious reference to the date only amplified the sense of an off day that felt cosmically predetermined.
Compounding the distress was the presence of her 18-year-old daughter, Victoire-Eléonore, who had been in Cortina d’Ampezzo to celebrate Hernandez’s earlier gold medal in snowboard cross. Just days prior, both had been in tears of joy on the podium. “Emotionally, I am done. I just saw my daughter crying, that’s all I didn’t want,” Hernandez admitted. “I wanted to have her cry with joy and not like this. But she told me, ‘I am proud.’ I wanted to make another podium.” The personal stakes were high, transforming an athletic setback into a family moment of poignant complexity.
Hernandez’s career, spanning four Paralympic Games, is built on overcoming adversity. Diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, she has used adaptive snowboarding to achieve extraordinary success. Her Paralympic medal collection is a testament to sustained excellence:
- 2014 Sochi: Silver in snowboard cross
- 2018 Pyeongchang: Silver in banked slalom, Bronze in snowboard cross
- 2022 Beijing: Gold in snowboard cross
- 2026 Cortina d’Ampezzo: Gold in snowboard cross (earlier in these Games), fourth in banked slalom
As France’s flag bearer at the opening ceremony, Hernandez embodies the spirit of the Paralympics—resilience, determination, and elite performance. Her stumble on Friday the 13th, while devastating, does not define her legacy but rather highlights the razor-thin margins between glory and heartbreak in high-performance sport.
This incident resonates beyond a single race. It reminds fans that Paralympic athletes, despite their superhuman adaptations, are still susceptible to the universal quirks of luck and psychology. Hernandez’s openness about the day’s misfortunes—from spilled coffee to forgotten gear—demystifies the perfection often projected on the world stage, offering a relatable narrative of struggle that connects deeply with audiences. Her ability to verbally process the “frequency of the universe” reveals a mindset that, while spiritual, is also humanly fragile under pressure.
For the Paralympic movement, stories like Hernandez’s amplify the emotional depth that makes the Games compelling. They underscore that every run, every jump, every gate is a blend of preparation, skill, and uncontrollable variables. As fans and analysts dissect her fourth-place finish, the takeaway is clear: even legends have days where the stars align against them, and the resilience to rebound is what truly champions are made of.
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