Queenslander Jackie Narracott has backed up her recent World Cup form to hold the lead midway through the women’s skeleton at the Beijing Olympics.

Jackie Narracott is on the verge of creating her own piece of Australian Olympic history after scorching to a shock lead at the midway point of the women’s skeleton at the Beijing Games.

The 31-year-old Queenslander has a two-run combined time of two minutes 04.34 seconds, placing her ahead of two athletes from traditional sliding powerhouse Germany – Hanna Neise and world champion Tina Hermann.

Neise is 0.21 seconds behind Narracott with the medals to be decided after two further runs on Saturday night.

There are eight women within 0.53 seconds of the lead.

Australia has never medalled in any of the sliding events at a Winter Olympics.
“This is what dreams are made of,” Narracott said.

“I was just completely in the moment … doing what I needed to do, not worrying about what happened, just what I needed to do.

“That’s how I want to slide and how I slide best.

“I had hoped to be in with the mix, but to be sitting on top is unreal.”

READ MORE
Jackie Narracott wins Australia's first skeleton World Cup GOLD

Narracott arrived at her second Olympics in career-best form, becoming the first Australian to win a skeleton World Cup gold medal, after topping the podium at St Moritz, Switzerland last month.

She said she benefited then from having her husband and coach – Dom Parsons, who won a bronze for Britain at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games – alongside her for the first time since October.

Parsons is with her in Beijing, too and the extra set of eyes is working wonders.

“All year, we were doing it via FaceTime and with video,” said Narracott, who was 16th on her Olympic debut four years ago.

“To have him by my side, seeing the ice as I’m seeing it … it’s huge.”

In the skeleton, athletes use a small sled to race head-first down a frozen track, reaching speeds of up to 140 kilometres per hour.

Narracott’s uncle, Paul Narracott, was the first Australian to compete at both a Summer and Winter Olympic Games.

He competed as a track sprinter at the 1984 Los Angeles Games before joining the two-man bobsleigh team at Albertville in 1992.

The final two heats including medal heat are on today from 11.20pm AEDT.

*with AP

READ MORE
Gallery: All the feels, Shaun White's career swan song in Beijing