KATIE Ormerod hopes to soar through the South Korean skies to a place on the Winter Olympics podium – despite suffering a fractured wrist on the first day assessing the Pyeongchang course.

The 20-year-old Brighouse snowboarder is at her first Olympics but there is plenty of expectation on her after her World Cup and X-Games medals in recent seasons in both Olympic events, slopestyle and Big Air.

Ormerod today had her first training session at the Phoenix Snow Park, the venue for the slopestyle event, providing an opportunity to assess the course and work out her routine.

The dangers of her sport became clear once again as she suffered a minor fracture to her wrist which, she insists, will not prevent her from competing.

Ormerod wrote on Instagram: "First training day and the course is awesome!

"Unfortunately I slipped off a rail and have a minor fracture to my wrist. I'm totally fine and looking forward to continuing to train and getting ready to compete on Sunday. Can't wait."

Ormerod fractured a bone in her back in March 2017 but she made a rapid recovery and, rather than fear, her focus is on the rush from executing the acrobatic tricks.

"I didn't let anything stop me coming to the Olympics," said Ormerod, before the latest injury was disclosed.

"Injuries happen. It's so easy to get an injury. You just have to brush it off and get back on it.

"It is an extreme sport, so it can be quite scary sometimes – especially when you're going over jumps as big as houses.

"You just have to put that fear to the back of your mind and focus on the enjoyment and the good things, like the adrenaline.

"When you go over a jump, it feels like you're flying and you get this mad adrenaline rush.

"I just think about all the positives and don't think about the negatives, because that's when something bad might happen."

Slopestyle qualification takes place on Sunday's second day of the Games, with the final on Monday, while the Big Air event begins on February 19.

The slopestyle discipline features rails and kickers, or jumps, on which the riders perform tricks, while the Big Air event comprises a single jump and one trick and is new for the 2018 Games in Pyeongchang.

Ormerod, who aged 16 became the first female to land a backside double cork 1080, is focused on completing the best runs she can.

She hopes to emulate Jenny Jones, who in snowboard slopestyle in Sochi won Great Britain's first Olympic medal on snow.

"It would be amazing to do what Jenny did and bring back a medal," said Ormerod.

"I've always dreamed of getting an Olympic medal. I just have to do the best run I can do and hopefully it will be enough on the day.

"I've got more medals in Big Air, more World Cup medals, so I think most people would expect me to do better in that.

"But I got a slopestyle X-Games medal, which is really big as well. I don't think I'm better at one or the other. I think I've got an equal chance in both."

Ormerod narrowly missed qualification for Sochi but her cousin Jamie Nicholls competed there and is a team-mate here.

She said: "It feels amazing to be at my first Olympics. It's nice to have a bit of family here. He's (Nicholls) been looking out for me."