Jeremy Lee Wotherspoon (born October 26, 1976) is a Canadian speed skater, widely known as one of the fastest sprinting runners of all time.
In December 2003, Wotherspoon became the most successful male skater in World Cup history when he claimed the 49th victory of his career. He ended his career with a record of 67 World Cup victories at 500 and 1,000 meters.
Wotherspoon broke the 500m world record on three occasions. His final record was broken in November 2015 by Pavel Kulizhnikov of Russia. He broke the world record 1000 m seven times.
Video Jeremy Wotherspoon
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Wotherspoon was born in Humboldt, Saskatchewan, but grew up in Red Deer, Alberta. There he was first involved in speedkating after enrolling for electric skating classes in an effort to improve his ice hockey skills. Initially, Wotherspoon competed on short tracks and long tracks. He finally chose a long track as a specialist and rode through the junior ranks, moving to Calgary to train with the Canadian national team at age 17. Wotherspoon immediately won a medal at the World Cup circuit, with his first victory in 1997.
Wotherspoon dominates the sprint event and holds the world record within 500m and 1000m. He is the Sprint World Champion four times, taking the title four times in five years between 1999 and 2003, and the World Cup General Champion 13 times at 500 m and 1000 m. During the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Wotherspoon won a silver medal in 500 m, despite being a favorite.
Four years later, at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Wotherspoon crashed at the beginning of its 500m journey, ending at 13th in the 1000m event. The next Olympics in Turin in 2006, he failed to reach the podium once again, placing 9 in 500 m event and 11 at 1000 m. Wotherspoon, disappointed, decides to spend time alone in Mausund, a remote Norwegian island near the Arctic Circle. When asked if he was nervous on the skate after a season from the sport, he stated, "I'm more interested in seeing how quickly I can get back on track."
2010 Olympics and first retirement
Following his time in Norway, Wotherspoon set a world record in the 500m event on November 9, 2007. However, he then suffered an arm injury while skating in the 2008-09 World Cup season. On December 27, 2009, Wotherspoon officially secured its place for a 500m and 1000m event at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver after finishing first in a Canadian trials held at the Calgary Olympic Oval. Despite this, Wotherspoon placed 9 and 14 in the Olympic event, respectively.
Wotherspoon announced its retirement from speed skating on December 6, 2009, promising to do so after the Vancouver Olympics and 2010 season ends.
Back
Wotherspoon announced that it was returning to speedkating in June 2013 with the aim of competing at the 2014 Winter Olympics. He failed, however, to qualify in his signature event, a 500m sprint, and was not named to the Canadian Olympic team.
Post Retirement
After his early retirement in 2010, Wotherspoon trained at an academy in Inzell, Germany, training skaters from countries without a coach, formal facility or program. He returned there after his comeback effort in 2014, then moved to a development team in Norway. In April 2016 Wotherspoon became the sprint coach for the Norwegian national team, with the aim of ending the three-decade Olympic medal defeat in the country in a long-running track event.
Maps Jeremy Wotherspoon
Personal life
Wotherspoon was born in Humboldt, Saskatchewan, but grew up in Red Deer, Alberta. She married former Canadian skateboard and 2006 Olympian Kim Weger; the couple had a daughter, Ella.
Recordings
Personal bests
World record
Sumber: SpeedSkatingStats.com.
Since 23 November 1997, Wotherspoon has held the world record for sprint combinations: the summing point of four races (2x500 m and 2x1000 m) glide sequentially in two or three days, as calculated for World Sprint Speed ââSkating Championships. He improved his own record five times since then. The fastest combination was 135,355 (34.03, 34.14, 1: 07.34, 1: 07.03), achieved during the World Cup races at the Utah Olympic Oval in November 2007, but this is not an official world record.
Furthermore, Wotherspoon has slid six of the fastest ten laps (400 m), the fastest lap 24.32 in its first 1000 m race in Salt Lake City in November 2007. The average speed on the lap is 59.21 kilometers. per hour (36.79 mph).
References
External links
- Jeremy Wotherspoon at www.skateresults.com
- Jeremy Wotherspoon's photo
Source of the article : Wikipedia