Short track speed skating at the 2010 Winter Olympics – Men's 1500 metres explained

Event:Men's 1500 metres
Games:2010 Winter
Venue:Pacific Coliseum
Dates:February 13
Competitors:36
Nations:16
Gold:Lee Jung-su
Goldnoc:KOR
Silver:Apolo Anton Ohno
Silvernoc:USA
Bronze:J. R. Celski
Bronzenoc:USA
Win Value:2:17.611
Win Label:Winning time
Prev:2006
Next:2014

The men's 1500 metres in short track speed skating at the 2010 Winter Olympics took place on February 13 at the Pacific Coliseum. Heats took place at 5:00 PM PST, while the semifinals took place at 6:18 PM PST and the final event one hour later at 7:18 PM PST.

Preview

Going into the competition, speculation about possible winners focused on the strong South Korean contingent and on American skater Apolo Ohno. The South Korean team dominated short track speed skating at the 2006 Winter Olympics, winning six gold, three silver, and two bronze medals in the eight events. Their team at the 2010 games also included a number of skaters who were reigning world champions.[1] Ohno received significant media attention both because of previous successes at the 2002 Winter Olympics and 2006 Games and because he was in a position to break two records, the most medals won by a short track speed skater, and the most medals won by any winter Olympian from the United States.[2]

Qualifying heats

Following the semifinal round, seven skaters qualified for the final medal round: Lee Jung-su, Lee Ho-suk and Sung Si-bak of South Korea, Apolo Ohno and J. R. Celski of the United States, Liang Wenhao of China, and Olivier Jean of Canada. Jean actually placed seventh in his semifinal heat, but advanced to the medal race after judges ruled that he had been interfered with during the race.[3]

Final heat and results

The South Korean skaters and Ohno jostled for the lead during much of the race, switching lead positions multiple times. Entering the final lap, the three South Koreans had passed Ohno and were in a position to sweep the medals in the event. However, at the entrance of the last corner on the final lap, Lee Ho-suk made a last-minute daring inside pass on Sung Si-bak, only to have his blade collide with Si-bak to cause both skaters to fall and slam into the barriers. This allowed Ohno and his fellow American skater J. R. Celski to move into second and third positions behind the eventual winner, Lee Jung-su. Lee Ho-suk was later disqualified by judges for causing the crash, and Sung Si-bak took fifth place.[4]

Following the race, gold medalist Lee Jung-su told the media that he did not feel good about his win because of his teammates' misfortune. He credited his win to a decision to start the race in the front of the pack, which was not his usual technique. With his second-place finish and his sixth medal, Ohno became the most medaled short track speed skater in Olympic history, and tied Bonnie Blair's record as the most medaled American winter Olympian. Celski, who was skating after recovering from an accident the previous fall in which a skate's blade had sliced into his leg, earned his first medal.[4]

Haralds Silovs became the first athlete in Olympic history to participate in both short track and long track (5000 m) speed skating, and the first to compete in two different disciplines on the same day. He competed in the 5000 m and then raced across town to the 1500 m event.[5] [6] [7] [8] [9]

Results

Heats

Rank Heat Name Country Time Notes
1 1 align=left align=left 2:14.279 Q
2 1 align=left align=left 2:14.324 Q
3 1 align=left align=left 2:14.354 Q
4 1 align=left align=left 2:14.461
5 1 align=left align=left 2:14.730
6 1 align=left align=left 2:14.929
1 2 align=left align=left 2:16.152 Q
2 2 align=left align=left 2:16.153 Q
3 2 align=left align=left 2:17.058 Q
4 2 align=left align=left 2:17.089
5 2 align=left align=left 2:30.701 ADV
2 align=left align=left DSQ
1 3 align=left align=left 2:12.380 Q
2 3 align=left align=left 2:12.460 Q
3 3 align=left align=left 2:12.609 Q
4 3 align=left align=left 2:12.875
5 3 align=left align=left 2:15.402
6 3 align=left align=left 2:16.782
1 4 align=left align=left 2:14.584 Q
2 4 align=left align=left 2:14.862 Q
3 4 align=left align=left 2:14.972 Q
4 4 align=left align=left 2:15.455
5 4 align=left align=left 2:16.826
6 4 align=left align=left 2:20.095
1 5 align=left align=left 2:17.653 Q
2 5 align=left align=left 2:18.560 Q
3 5 align=left align=left 2:18.827 Q
4 5 align=left align=left 2:19.163
5 5 align=left align=left 2:33.989 ADV
5 align=left align=left DSQ
1 6 align=left align=left 2:14.836 Q
2 6 align=left align=left 2:14.900 Q
3 6 align=left align=left 2:16.155 Q
4 6 align=left align=left 2:16.622
5 6 align=left align=left 2:46.222 ADV
6 align=left align=left DSQ

Semifinals

Rank Heat Name Country Time Notes
1 1 align=left align=left 2:10.949 QA, OR
2 1 align=left align=left 2:11.072 QA
3 1 align=left align=left 2:11.225 QB
4 1 align=left align=left 2:11.402 QB
5 1 align=left align=left 2:13.870
6 1 align=left align=left 2:15.129
7 1 align=left align=left 2:18.349
1 2 align=left align=left 2:14.833 QA
2 2 align=left align=left 2:15.453 QA
3 2 align=left align=left 2:16.240 QB
4 2 align=left align=left 2:16.249 QB
5 2 align=left align=left 2:17.156
6 2 align=left align=left 2:32.358 ADV
7 2 align=left align=left 2:36.291
1 3 align=left align=left 2:13.585 QA
2 3 align=left align=left 2:13.606 QA
3 3 align=left align=left 2:13.645 QB
4 3 align=left align=left 2:14.009 QB
5 3 align=left align=left 2:14.500
6 3 align=left align=left 2:15.984
7 3 align=left align=left 2:16.352

Finals

Final B (classification round)

Rank Name Country Time Notes
7 align=left align=left 2:18.243
8 align=left align=left 2:18.422
9 align=left align=left 2:18.773
10 align=left align=left 2:19.435
11 align=left align=left 2:20.374
align=left align=left DSQ

Final A (medal round)

Rank Name Country Time Notes
align=left align=left 2:17.611
align=left align=left 2:17.976
align=left align=left 2:18.053
4 align=left align=left 2:18.806
5 align=left align=left 2:45.010
6 align=left align=left 2:48.192
align=left align=left DSQ

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Short Track Speed Skating: South Korea aim to tighten golden stranglehold . Agence France-Presse . Vancouver 2010 . 2010-02-09 . 2010-02-14 . 2010-02-13 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100213194022/http://www.vancouver2010.com/olympic-news/n/news/afp-news/short-track-speed-skating--south-korea-aim-to-tighten-golden-stranglehold_271868Im.html . dead .
  2. News: Short Track Speed Skating: Ohno on track for history books . Agence France-Presse . Vancouver 2010 . 2010-02-09 . 2010-02-14 . 2010-02-13 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100213193941/http://www.vancouver2010.com/olympic-news/n/news/afp-news/short-track-speed-skating--ohno-on-track-for-history-books_271852Cl.html . dead .
  3. Web site: Men's 1500 m - Semifinals . Short Track . Vancouver 2010 . 2010-02-13 . 2010-02-14 . 2010-04-08 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100408205739/http://www.vancouver2010.com/olympic-short-track-speed-skating/schedule-and-results/mens-1500-m-semifinals_stm015200Pp.html . dead .
  4. News: Short Track Speed Skating: Korea's Lee wins 1,500m short-track gold . Agence France-Presse . Vancouver 2010 . 2010-02-13 . 2010-02-14 . 2010-02-14 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100214122928/http://www.vancouver2010.com/olympic-news/n/news/afp-news/short-track-speed-skating--korea%27s-lee-wins-1-500m-short-track-gold_277216LP.html . dead .
  5. Toronto Star, "Latvia's quick-change artist makes Olympic history", 14 February 2010 (accessed 18 February 2010).
  6. Washington Post, "Latvian speedskater is 1st to do double duty", Beth Harris, 13 February 2010 (accessed 18 February 2010).
  7. New York Times, "From Long Track to Short Track, an Unprecedented Journey", Karen Crouse, 13 February 2010 (accessed 18 February 2010.)
  8. CTV Olympics, "Latvian skater makes Olympic history", Agence France Press, 14 February 2010 (accessed 18 February 2010) .
  9. New York Times, "Crosstown Ride to a Speedskating First", Associated Press, 30 January 2010 (accessed 18 February 2010).