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Canadian speed skaters aim to top medal standings at 2nd short track World Cup in Montreal

Short track speed skating coach Sebastien Cros is hoping Canada can improve on its individual medal haul as the world's top skaters return to Maurice Richard Arena for a second ISU World Cup event from Friday to Sunday.

Live coverage available across CBC Sports platforms Saturday, Sunday at 1:32 p.m ET

A speed skater touches the ice as she makes a turn.
Canadian Danae Blais, seen above earlier in October, is looking to earn her first medal of the short track speed skating season at the second World Cup stop in Montreal this weekend. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press)

Short track speed skating coach Sebastien Cros is hoping Canada can improve on its individual medal haul as the world's top skaters return to Maurice Richard Arena for a second ISU World Cup event from Friday to Sunday.

Cros called the individual results at the season-opening World Cup event in Montreal last weekend "a little disappointing."

So what would make a good weekend in Cros's eyes?

"If we talk about numbers, if we want to be the top country, then we should have more medals than everybody else, and that would be a perfect weekend," said Cros with a smile.

Canada captured gold in the men's and women's relays to cap the weekend on a positive note. Live coverage of the second World Cup event is available on Saturday and Sunday beginning at 1:32 p.m. ET on CBCSports.ca, the CBC Sports app and CBC Gem.

WATCH | Canadian women's relay team wins gold: 

Canada's women skate to 3,000m relay gold in Montreal

1 year ago
Duration 7:53
Danae Blais, Florence Brunelle, Courtney Sarault and Renée Marie Steenge top the ISU World Cup short track podium.

Individually, the team won three medals in eight events as Steven Dubois took silver in the first men's 1,000-metre event, William Dandjinou earned bronze in the second, and Felix Roussel won silver in the men's 500. South Korea led all countries with seven solo medals.

Canadian national champion Courtney Sarault had a fourth-place finish in the women's 1,000 but said she wasn't feeling great physically and "wouldn't say it was my best competition ever."

Danaé Blais — who skated Canada to gold in the final laps of the women's relay — said she separates that triumph from her individual races.

"Individually I have a lot to work on," said Blais, who had her best result in the 1,500, where she came sixth. "But I'm confident that I can work on that and arrive strong [this weekend]."

Cros said they would try to correct the "little mistakes" and "little details" that made the difference, using video to point out some tweaks certain skaters could make.

He still expects his team to produce even though it's early in the season.

"It's not the time to peak, but we're still in a state of mind where we want to do well in every competition," said Cros. "Of course, the world championships are more important, but I still see that some of our athletes are not yet at 100 per cent [of their abilities].

WATCH | Steven Dubois claims short track silver on home ice: 

Canada's Steven Dubois scores 1,000m short track silver in Montreal

1 year ago
Duration 3:53
The native of Terrebonne, Que., finished second in his race at the ISU World Cup event.

"Everything we worked on in training, we see it's there, we see we're close, it'll take a little refinement."

Despite the success in relays, Canada may not ice the same combinations this weekend.

Cros said it's a balancing act between chasing results and developing the skaters.

"We want results, but we're thinking about the whole team because we don't know what team we'll have at the world championships in March or in a year or two," he said. "The idea is to get them familiar with working with each other in different ways so that when we arrive at major competitions, we've developed that — there's nothing new, there's no surprises and we know what we have to do."

The competition begins Friday with qualification followed by quarterfinals, semifinals and finals on Saturday and Sunday.

Some Canadian skaters will then take part in a third consecutive competition at home as Laval, Que., hosts the Nov. 3-5 Four Continents speedskating championships at Place Bell.

The world championships are set for March 15-17 in Rotterdam, Netherlands.

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