Speed skating star Jordan Stolz continues dominance, wins 1,500m in Calgary

American speedskating star Jordan Stolz won the men's 1,500 metres race at Calgary's World Cup event Friday night.

American phenom, 20, sets track record at Olympic Oval

A men's speed skate adjusts his eyeglasses.
American speed skater Jordan Stolz, shown in this file photo, continued his string of dominant performances with a track-record skate in Calgary on Friday. Stolz won the men's 1,500-metre event at the Olympic Oval in 1:41.22. (File/AFP via Getty Images)

American speedskater star Jordan Stolz continued his World Cup dominance while Canada's Isabelle Weidemann searched for an extra gear in a race she gets few chances to execute in a season.

A six-time world champion at age 20, Stolz won the 1,500 metres Friday and set a track record at Calgary's Olympic Oval with a time of one minute, 41.22 seconds.

"That track record was, I think, there for awhile," Stolz said. "It was a tough one to beat so I'm glad to take that one.

"Had a really good opener in first lap and then after that, I started blowing up a little, and when I felt that I just attacked the last lap as hard as I could. The last lap was actually pretty good, but it was tough to see straight after that."

WATCH | Stolz sets track record in Calgary:

American Jordan Stolz wins 1,500m World Cup gold, sets Olympic Oval track record

2 days ago
Duration 4:18
Jordan Stolz of the United States finishes first in the men's 1,500-metre event with a track-record time of 1:41.22 at Calgary's Olympic Oval. Stolz wins his 13th straight World Cup race dating back to last season.

Calgary's altitude and dry air made Stolz suffer for his win. He vomited after the race.

"Had a very bad headache," he said. "You'd lean down, it was just throbbing, feels like it's going to explode."

Stolz, from West Bend, Wisc., remained undefeated in the 1,500 this season and will put his unbeaten record in the 1,000 and 500 to the test Saturday and Sunday in the season's third World Cup.

He won those three distances at last year's world championship here to replicate his 2023 hat trick in Heerenveen, the Netherlands.

"He's a generational talent. It's up to us to try and catch him," said Norway's Peter Kongshaug, who placed third in the 1,500. "In the beginning, it was like people were really in awe, but now it's more annoying."

WATCH | Speed skating phenom Stolz speaks with CBC Sports:

Speed skating phenom Jordan Stolz: Pressure, history, and Eric Heiden comparisons

2 days ago
Duration 8:00
CBC Sports' Devin Heroux chats with the American speed skater in an exclusive one-on-one interview.

Connor Howe of Canmore, Alta., was eighth in the race.

Meanwhile, Weidemann placed fifth in the first and only women's 5,000 metres this World Cup season.

The 2022 Olympic silver medallist raced an international 5,000-metre event for the first time since placing fourth at last year's world championship.

World Cup distance races for women are predominantly 3,000 metres with the rare 5,000-metre competition on the schedule.

Weidemann won't race another until the world championship in March.

"It always feels like a work in progress," Weidemann said. "We don't get a lot of opportunities to practice them at an international event, which is what I think is part of what makes them so special.

"You just have to come out and hit it and there are no second tries."

The 29-year-old from Ottawa felt she was scrambling Friday, while three of the four women ahead of her posted personal-best times at the Oval.

WATCH | Weidemann weighs in on the uncertain future of Calgary's Olympic Oval:

Isabelle Weidemann on the uncertain future of Calgary’s Olympic Oval

2 days ago
Duration 0:38
The Canadian speed skater gave her thoughts after competing in the women's 5000m in Calgary’s Olympic Oval.

Dutchwomen Joy Beune and Merel Conijn finished one-two and Czechia's Martina Sablikova was third.

"I came fifth today and like to think I'm still in the mix. Maybe not as close to the podium as I'd like to be," Weidemann. "I never had a second gear.

"I try to start a little bit slower, a little more conservative and then I try to put it into an extra gear, start attacking and start bringing the times down. I threw it in that gear and I didn't have it.

"I'm excited to see if we can find that. I definitely think it's in there somewhere."

Japan's Miho Takagi won the women's 1,000 metres. Beatrice Lamarche of Quebec City finished eighth.

The 5,000 was Weidemann's lone race of Calgary's World Cup. She'll compete in the 3,000 and team pursuit next weekend in Milwaukee in Stolz's home state.

Valerie Maltais of Saguenay, Que., was eighth and Ottawa's Ivanie Blondin 11th in the 5,000. They are medal favourites in Sunday's mass start.

WATCH | Maltais reacts to new personal best in the women's 5,000m:

Canadian speed skater Valérie Maltais reacts to new PB in the women's 5,000m

2 days ago
Duration 0:38
Maltais skated to a PB in Calgary in the Olympic Oval.

Laurent Dubreuil of Levis, Que., takes on Stolz in the men's 1,000 metres Saturday. Dubreuil was a silver medallist in Beijing.

Calgary's Ted-Jan Bloemen and Graeme Fish of Moose Jaw, Sask., also step to the line in the men's 10,000 on Saturday.

Bloemen and Fish took silver and bronze, respectively, in the 2024 world championship.

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