2018 Olympic silver medallist Jarryd Hughes did it tough at the snowboard cross in Beijing, bowing out early on a disappointing day for the Australian men.

A distraught Jarryd Hughes had to be consoled by Australian teammates after his campaign for a second Olympic snowboard cross medal fell flat.

Only fellow triple Olympian Cameron Bolton made it through the first final at the Genting Snow Park on Thursday, but he but was eliminated at the quarter-final stage.

Fellow Australians Adam Dickson and Adam Lambert bowed out at the same stage as Hughes.

The 26-year-old won silver at the PyeongChang Games, but after a troubled build-up never looked in the game on Thursday, qualifying through the seeding round in 28th spot.

The result could cost Hughes a spot alongside Belle Brockhoff, who finished fourth in the women’s event, in the mixed teams race on Saturday despite the pair being reigning world champions.

L-R; Martin Noel of Germany, Paul Berg of Germany, Lucas Eguibar of Spain and Jarryd Hughes of Australia compete in the 3rd, 1/8 final round of the Men’s Snowboard Cross event at the Genting Snow Park, during the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympic Games, in Beijing, China, Thursday, February 10, 2022. (AAP Image/Dan Himbrechts)

Australian selectors are expected to make a call on Thursday night with Bolton poised to jump into the hot seat.

Hughes drew a tough 1/8 final, alongside top-ranked German Martin Noel and Spanish world champion Lucas Eguibar.

He crashed out of the running, attempting to force his way through the four-man field.
“You can’t make any mistakes and I made a big mistake when I was trying to make my move,” Hughes said.

“It’s disappointing – I should be able to do that move 10 out of 10 times – it’s one of those screw-ups.

“No excuses, I rode like s***.”

While he wasn’t looking for a way out, Hughes tore the ligament off his ankle training in August and after being unable to manage the injury, went for surgery.

He had been having regular cortisone injections, including one last week in order to compete.

“It’s been a tough couple of months coming back from surgery and bad injuries, concussion … I’ve been working my arse off to get it back,” he said.

“I’ve been feeling good and I came here ready to perform and I haven’t.

“I’m just going to have to come back in four years to get that gold that I want.”

Bolton, 31, clocked the eighth-fastest time in the first run and won a bronze at the most recent World Cup in Italy.

“I’ve been feeling really good all day so that made it disappointing in that run,” Bolton said.

He said the Australian men would all feel that way after arriving in Beijing with high hopes.

“It’s the nature of the sport but I can tell you there will be four boys after today who are bitterly disappointed with their results,” Bolton said.

“I know they’re all capable of much stronger results on their day.”

Austrian Alessandro Haemmerle won the final ahead of Canadian Eliot Grondin, with Italian Omar Visintin taking the bronze medal.

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