Norwegian biathlete says he's learned to watch what he says after admitting to cheating on his girlfriend

Catch up with NBC News Clone on today's hot topic: Norwegian Biathlete Says Learned Watch Says Admitting Cheating Girlfri Rcna259380 - Sports and Recreation | NBC News Clone. Our editorial team reformatted this story for clarity and speed.

"After my atomic bomb in the mixed zone [about his cheating], I feel like I need to really watch what I’m saying," Sturla Holm Lægreid said.
Sturla Holm Laegreid cries and wipes his tear with a stuffed animal
Bronze medalist Sturla Holm Lægreid after finishing third in the men's 20km individual at the Milano Cortina Olympics on Feb. 10.Matthew Childs / Reuters
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ANTERSELVA, Italy — Norway’s Sturla Holm Lægreid said he has learned to hold his tongue in front of the media’s microphones at the Milan Cortina Games after a pair of gaffes that got him more headlines than his biathlon medals.

The 28-year-old, who won silver in Tuesday’s men’s relay, went viral for revealing in a post-race interview that he had cheated on his girlfriend, and he caused a war of words with Emilien Jacquelin of France with a joke in another interview that missed its target.

“After my atomic bomb in the mixed zone (about his cheating), I feel like I need to really watch what I’m saying, because now, now that every statement from me can become clickbait,” Lægreid told Reuters with a broad grin.

After beating the Frenchman to bronze in the men’s individual race by two-tenths of a second, Lægreid was on the receiving end of plenty of negative comments on social media after wondering if Jacquelin had stopped to greet fans.

“I mean, it’s just joking with each other — I know a lot of French fangirls of Emilien are mad, but as long as there are still good vibes between me and him, that’s what matters,” he said, adding that the Norwegians and the French still play video games together online.

Lægreid faced a tough battle as he picked up his fourth medal of the Games to leave him with a tally of two silver and two bronze.

“It was a fight, for sure, big variations. We went from leading to pursuing, and then we were equal, and then it was a fight between us and France, so this really had it all,” he said.

The Norwegian will get one last chance at Olympic gold in Friday’s mass start.

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