Speed skating at the 2022 Winter Olympics – Men's 1000 metres

The men's 1000 m competition in speed skating at the 2022 Winter Olympics will be held on 18 February, at the National Speed Skating Oval ("Ice Ribbon") in Beijing.[1] Thomas Krol of the Netherlands won the event, it was his first Olympic gold medal. Laurent Dubreuil of Canada won the silver medal, his first Olympic medal. Håvard Holmefjord Lorentzen of Norway won bronze.

Men's 1000 metres
at the XXIV Olympic Winter Games
VenueNational Speed Skating Oval ,
Beijing
Date18 February
Competitors30 from 16 nations
Winning time1:07.92
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Thomas Krol
 Netherlands
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Laurent Dubreuil
 Canada
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Håvard Holmefjord Lorentzen
 Norway
← 2018
2026 →

The reigning champion, Kjeld Nuis, qualified for the Olympics, but will not be able to defend his title as he did not qualify for this distance. The 2018 silver medalist, Håvard Holmefjord Lorentzen, qualified, as did the bronze medalist, Kim Tae-yun. Kai Verbij is the 2021 World Single Distances champion at the 1000m distance. The silver medalist and the world record holder is Pavel Kulizhnikov. Thomas Krol was leading the 2021–22 ISU Speed Skating World Cup at the 1000m distance with four races completed before the Olympics, followed by Nuis and Holmefjord Lorentzen. Krol skated the season best time, 1:06.44 in Salt Lake City on 5 December 2021.[2]

Piotr Michalski in pair 4 was the first skater out of 1:09 and took an early lead. Only in pair 13 Krol and Holmefjord Lorentzen both improved his time. Krol became the first skater to go below 1:08, with two pairs to go. The winner of pair 14, Ning Zhongyan, had the time just 0.04 worse than Michalski's. In the last pair, Laurent Dubreuil had the second overall time, shifting Michalski off the podium.

Qualification edit

A total of 30 entry quotas were available for the event, with a maximum of three athletes per NOC. The first 20 athletes qualified through their performance at the 2021–22 ISU Speed Skating World Cup, while the last ten earned quotas by having the best times among athletes not already qualified. A country could only earn the maximum three spots through the World Cup rankings.[3]

The qualification time for the event (1:10.50) was released on July 1, 2021, and was unchanged from 2018.[4] Skaters had the time period of July 1, 2021 – January 16, 2022 to achieve qualification times at valid International Skating Union (ISU) events.[4]

Records edit

Prior to this competition, the existing world, Olympic and track records were as follows.

World record   Pavel Kulizhnikov (RUS) 1:05.69 Salt Lake City, United States 15 February 2020
Olympic record   Gerard van Velde (NED) 1:07.18 Salt Lake City, United States 16 February 2002
Track record   Xu Fu (CHN) 1:11.40 8 April 2021

Results edit

The races were started at 16:30.[5]

Rank Pair Lane Name Country Time Time behind Notes
  13 I Thomas Krol   Netherlands 1:07.92 TR
  15 I Laurent Dubreuil   Canada 1:08.32 +0.40
  13 O Håvard Holmefjord Lorentzen   Norway 1:08.48 +0.56
4 4 I Piotr Michalski   Poland 1:08.56 +0.64
5 14 I Ning Zhongyan   China 1:08.60 +0.68
6 12 I Ignat Golovatsiuk   Belarus 1:08.64 +0.71
7 11 I Marten Liiv   Estonia 1:08.65 +0.73
8 12 O Viktor Mushtakov   ROC 1:08.74 +0.82
9 10 O Cornelius Kersten   Great Britain 1:08.79 +0.87
10 14 O Hein Otterspeer   Netherlands 1:08.80 +0.88
11 6 I Pavel Kulizhnikov   ROC 1:08.87 +0.95
12 11 O Connor Howe   Canada 1:08.97 +1.05
13 1 O Damian Żurek   Poland 1:09.08 +1.16
14 7 I Jordan Stolz   United States 1:09.12 +1.20
15 5 I David Bosa   Italy 1:09.35 +1.43
16 3 I Wataru Morishige   Japan 1:09.47 +1.55
17 2 I Dmitriy Morozov   Kazakhstan 1:09.61 +1.69
18 10 I Cha Min-kyu   South Korea 1:09.69 +1.77
19 4 O Lian Ziwen   China 1:09.93 +2.01
20 9 I Ryota Kojima   Japan 1:09.97 +2.05
21 1 I Tatsuya Shinhama   Japan 1:10.00 +2.08
22 8 I Antoine Gélinas-Beaulieu   Canada 1:10.075 +2.15
23 5 O Denis Kuzin   Kazakhstan 1:10.077 +2.15
24 7 O Kim Min-seok   South Korea 1:10.08 +2.16
25 3 O Bjørn Magnussen   Norway 1:10.14 +2.22
26 8 O Joel Dufter   Germany 1:10.16 +2.24
27 6 O Mathias Vosté   Belgium 1:10.22 +2.30
28 9 O Allan Dahl Johansson   Norway 1:10.34 +2.42
29 2 O Austin Kleba   United States 1:10.67 +2.65
30 15 O Kai Verbij   Netherlands 1:14.17 +6.25

References edit

  1. ^ "Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games Competition Schedule Version 9" (PDF). New.inews.gtimg.com. Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  2. ^ "Season Bests2021-2022". Speedskatingresults.com.
  3. ^ "Qualification Systems for XXIV Olympic Winter Games, Beijing 2022 Speed Skating" (PDF). International Skating Union. Retrieved 10 February 2022.
  4. ^ a b "Communication No. 2405 Qualifying competitions and qualifying times for Speed Skating events at the 2022 Olympic Winter Games". www.isu.org/. International Skating Union. 1 July 2021. Retrieved 10 February 2022.
  5. ^ Final results