Ted-Jan Bloemen Explained

Ted-Jan Bloemen
Headercolor:
  1. d7ecff
Nationality:Dutch
Canadian
Birth Date:16 August 1986
Birth Place:Leiderdorp, Netherlands[1]
Height:1.77m[2]
Weight:72kg
Event:5000 m, 10000 m
Country:Canada
Club:Ichiban SSC
Coach:Bart Schouten
Turnedpro:2006
Show-Medals:no

Ted-Jan Bloemen (born 16 August 1986) is a Dutch-Canadian long track speed skater. He started competing for the Canadian national speed skating team during the 2014–15 season, but before that, he competed for the Netherlands in international competitions. Bloemen primarily competes in long-distance events as well as team pursuit events. He is a former world record holder for the 5,000 m (6:01.86), set in Salt Lake City, and was the Olympic record holder for the 10,000 m (12:39.77), set when he won gold at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang. Bloemen also won a silver medal in the 5,000 m at the Pyeongchang Olympics, the first Canadian man to medal in the distance since 1932. He has won a silver in 10,000 m and one bronze and silver in the team pursuit at the World Speed Skating Championships.

Career

Bloemen started skating at a young age in his hometown of Gouda. He participated at the 2006 World Junior Speed Skating Championships in Erfurt, where he came in 5th. In the 2007/2008 season, he first participated in the Speed Skating World Cup at the long distances, winning the Team pursuit with the Dutch team. He also reached 4th place at that season's Dutch Allround Championships and 8th place at the 2008 European Speed Skating Championships. The 2009/2010 season was his best up to that point, coming in second at the Dutch Allround and 4th at the World Allround Championships.[3] Following a less successful next season, he retired as a professional skater but still participated in championships as an amateur operating from Friesland. Remarkably, he qualified for the 2012 European (9th place) and World Championships (14th place) and won the National Championships. Though somewhat aided by the absence of Jan Blokhuijsen and Sven Kramer, this was the first time that an amateur won this Dutch National Championships since the introduction of professional skating.[4] He joined the (professional) BAM skating team the next season, but disappointing results (15th at the European Championships) caused his contract not to be extended.[5]

Bloemen moved to Canada to compete for the Canadian national team in the summer of 2014.[6] He won a silver medal as part of the team pursuit with Canada at the 2015 World Single Distance Speed Skating Championships. There Canada's Denny Morrison and teammate said of the team's silver that "With (Bloemen) coming over this summer, it was a new team, and we struggled early on this season. So we had to communicate, find out what our flaws were, correct our flaws, and we had better results... And today, it all came together. This is just the beginning for us on the road to the 2018 Olympics."[7]

He set a world record in the 10,000 metres on 21 November 2015 with a time of 12 minutes 36.30 seconds at an ISU World Cup event. This was more than five seconds faster than the previous mark of 12:41.69 set by Sven Kramer of the Netherlands on 10 March 2007; both men set their times at Salt Lake City's Utah Olympic Oval.[8] After the race he said, "I've dreamt of this record for a long time. It was a perfect race. All through the race, I heard the P.A. announcer and the crowd go wild when they saw my times and realized I was close to a world record. But I was quick to ignore it all, and I was able to refocus on my technique, which was key to having a good race – as well as being consistent, physically and mentally."[8] Two years later, Bloemen also beat the 5,000 m world record, again pipping Kramer to the feat, overcoming the ten-year-old time that Kramer put up with a time of 6:01.86.[9]

The 2018 Winter Olympics took place in Pyeongchang, Korea and there Bloemen competed for Canada in his first Olympics at the age of 31. In the 5,000 m race, his first event, he skated to a silver medal. Trailing his skating partner Sverre Lunde Pedersen on the final lap by nearly a second, Bloemen was able to tie Pedersen in a photo finish. Photo technology later revealed that he had beaten Pedersen by two-thousandths of a second.[10] This was the first medal for Canada in the men's 5,000 m since Willy Logan won bronze in Lake Placid at the 1932 Winter Olympics.[11] In the 10,000 m race, Bloemen won the gold medal to become the first non-Dutch skater to win a speed-skating event at the 2018 Games.[12] He also set the new Olympic Record for that distance. Bloemen finished off the season by winning the annual World Cup 5,000/10,000-metre classification championship.[13]

On February 13, 2020, Bloemen won the gold medal in the 5000 m event at the 2020 World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships skated at the Utah Olympic Oval in Salt Lake City; Canadian teammate Graeme Fish took the bronze.[14] The next day he finished second in the 10,000 m race in which Fish broke Bloemen's 2015 world record to take the gold medal.[15]

Personal

Bloemen's father, Gerhard-Jan Bloemen, is a retired[16] general practitioner in Gouda and has dual Dutch-Canadian citizenship, being born in Bathurst, New Brunswick, a few years before his Dutch parents returned with him to the Netherlands. This made Bloemen also a dual citizen through his Canadian-born father.[8] [17] although he was born in Canada he was Dutch by birth for both his parents were Dutch.

Personal records

As of 10 March 2019, Bloemen is in 7th position in the adelskalender with 145.841 points.[18] Between 12 October 2017 and 2 March 2019 he held a personal best 5th place.[19]

Tournament overview


Season
Dutch
Championships
Single
Distances
Dutch
Championships
Allround
European
Championships
Allround
World
Championships
Allround
World
Championships
Single
Distances

Olympic
Games
World Cup
GWC
World
Championships
Junior
Canadian
Championships
Single Distances/
Long Track

2005–06

24th 1500m
15th 5000m

13th 500m
13th 5000m
23rd 1500m
DNQ 10000m
NC overall(20th)
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22nd 500m
5000m
9th 1500m
10000m
5th overall
team pursuit
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2006–07

14th 5000m

20th 500m
15th 5000m
25th 1500m
DNQ 10000m
NC overall(21st)
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2007–08

9th 5000m
5th 10000m
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38th 5000/10000m
team pursuit
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2008–09

5th 5000m
4th 10000m
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6th 5000/10000m
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2009–10
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2010–11
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35th 5000/10000m
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2011–12

15th 500m
14th 5000m
14th 1500m
DNQ 10000m
NC overall(14th)
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28th 5000/10000m
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2012–13

20th 500m
11th 5000m
18th 1500m
DNQ 10000m
NC overall(15th)
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8th 5000/10000m
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2013–14

13th 500m
9th 5000m
13th 1500m
DNQ 10000m
NC overall(12th)
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2014–15
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22nd 500m
8th 5000m
17th 1500m
DNQ 10000m
NC overall(16th)
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36th 1500m
16th 5000/10000m
bgcolor=#EEEEEE
1500m
5000m
19th 500m

2015–16
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28th 1500m
4th 5000/10000m
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2016–17
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27th 1500m
5000/10000m
bgcolor=#EEEEEE
5000m
17th 500m
DQ 1500m
1500m

2017–18
bgcolor=#EEEEEE bgcolor=#EEEEEE bgcolor=#EEEEEE
19th 500m
15th 5000m
6th 1500m
DNQ 10000m
NC overall(16th)
bgcolor=#EEEEEE
43rd 1500m
5000/10000m
bgcolor=#EEEEEE
5000m
4th 1500m
10000m

2018–19
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34th 1500m
7th 5000/10000m
bgcolor=#EEEEEE
5000m
1500m

2019–20
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59th 1500m
4th 5000/10000m
bgcolor=#EEEEEE
5000m
10000m
6th 1500m

2020–21
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29th 1500m
15th 5000/10000m
bgcolor=#EEEEEE bgcolor=#EEEEEE

2021–22
bgcolor=#EEEEEE bgcolor=#EEEEEE bgcolor=#EEEEEE bgcolor=#EEEEEE bgcolor=#EEEEEE bgcolor=#EEEEEE
5000m
10000m
5th 1500m
Source: [20] [21] [22]

Medal overview

Championship
1 1 0
1 1 0
World Championships Single Distances team 0 1 0
World Championships Allround individual 0 1 2
World Championships Junior team 1 0 0
World Cup
individual
team
1
1
0
1
1
0
4 1 0

Career highlights

Winter Olympics
  • 2018Pyeongchang, at Men's 5000m
  • 2018Pyeongchang, at Men's 10000m
    World Allround Championships
  • 2010 – Heerenveen, 4th
  • 2016 – Berlin, 5th
  • 2019 – Calgary, 5th
    European Allround Championships
  • 2008 – Kolomna, 8th
    National Allround Championships
  • 2010Heerenveen,
  • 2012Heerenveen,
    World Junior Allround Championships
  • 2006 – Erfurt, 5th
  • 2006 – Erfurt, 1st at team pursuit
    European Junior Games
  • 2006 – Collalbo, 1st at team pursuit
  • 2006 – Collalbo, 3rd at 1500 m

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Bloemen, Ted-Jan . . 23 September 2015.
    2. Web site: Ted-Jan Bloemen Profile . https://web.archive.org/web/20151123154645/http://asia.eurosport.com/speed-skating/ted-jan-bloemen_prs233900/person.shtml . dead . 23 November 2015 . Eurosport . 23 September 2015.
    3. http://www.telegraaf.nl/telesport/schaatsen/article20414615.ece Bloemen bloeit op
    4. http://www.rtlnieuws.nl/sport/ted-jan-bloemen-nederlands-kampioen-allround Ted-Jan Bloemen Nederlands kampioen allround
    5. http://www.nu.nl/schaatsen/3381441/geen-contractverlenging-bloemen-bij-bam.html Geen contractverlenging Bloemen bij BAM
    6. Web site: Dutch international long track speed skater Ted-Jan Bloemen from Netherlands coming to skate for Canada . . 15 February 2015.
    7. News: Denny Morrison wins 2 medals at speed skating worlds . . 13 February 2015.
    8. News: Ted-Jan Bloemen sets world long-track speed skating record in 10,000m. 22 November 2015. The Canadian Press. CBC Sports. 21 November 2015.
    9. News: Canadian speed skater Bloemen breaks decade-old world record in men's 5,000 . . 10 December 2017 . 11 February 2018.
    10. News: How Canada helped Ted-Jan Bloemen reach his potential . . 11 February 2018.
    11. News: Canadian speed skater Bloemen wins silver in men's 5,000m . . 11 February 2018.
    12. News: Bloemen hands Canada speed skating gold . 15 February 2018 . PyeongChang, Republic of Korea . OWG Speed Skating News . International Skating Union . 15 February 2018.
    13. News: Ted-Jan Bloemen crowned World Cup speed skating champ. 4 April 2018. 17 March 2018. CBC Sports.
    14. News: Canada's Bloemen, Fish burst to gold, bronze at single distance speed skating worlds . 15 February 2020 . The Canadian Press . CBC Sports . 13 February 2020.
    15. News: Canada's Graeme Fish breaks 10,000m world record at speed skating championships . 15 February 2020 . CBC Sports . 14 February 2020.
    16. https://www.ad.nl/gouda/goudse-huisarts-bloemen-met-pensioen-meer-tijd-om-schaatszoon-ted-jan-aan-te-moedigen~a7d75ac1/ Goudse huisarts Bloemen met pensioen: ‘Meer tijd om schaatszoon Ted-Jan aan te moedigen’ (in Dutch)
    17. Web site: Dutch speed skater Ted-Jan Bloemen wants to compete for Canada. CBC Sports. 3 June 2014.
    18. Web site: Adelskalendern . evertstenlund.se. 5 November 2018.
    19. Evert Stenlund, Evolution of Adelskalendern since 1 July 2014
    20. Web site: Ted-Jan Bloemen. speedskatingstats.com . 16 November 2022.
    21. Web site: Ted-Jan Bloemen. speedskatingnews.info . 23 November 2022.
    22. Web site: Ted-Jan Bloemen . speedskatingresults.com . 23 November 2022.