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Jeremy Wotherspoon

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Country
  
Canada

Height
  
1.90 m

World Championships (sprint)
  
4

Role
  
Speed Skater


Olympic Games
  
0

Name
  
Jeremy Wotherspoon

Sport
  
Total
  
8

Weight
  
85 kg

Jeremy Wotherspoon Jeremy Wotherspoon Pictures ISU Single Distances Speed

Born
  
October 26, 1976 (age 48) (
1976-10-26
)

Siblings
  
Danielle Wotherspoon-Gregg

Olympic medals
  
Speed Skating at the 1998 Winter Olympics - Men's 500m

Similar People
  
Hiroyasu Shimizu, Danielle Wotherspoon‑Gregg, Kevin Overland

Profiles


World Championships (distances)
  
4

2013 inductee jeremy wotherspoon


Jeremy Lee Wotherspoon (born October 26, 1976) is a Canadian speed skater, widely recognized as one of the greatest speedskating sprinters of all time.

Contents

Jeremy Wotherspoon wwwsportshallcamediamemberfilesuploadJeremy

In December 2003, Wotherspoon became the most successful male skater in World Cup history when he claimed the 49th victory of his career. He finished his career with a record 67 World Cup wins at 500 and 1,000 metres.

Jeremy Wotherspoon Jeremy Wotherspoon Photos Speed Skating Day 6 Zimbio

Wotherspoon broke the 500 m world record on three occasions. His last standing record was broken in November 2015 by Pavel Kulizhnikov of Russia. He broke the 1000 m world record seven times.

Jeremy Wotherspoon Jeremy Wotherspoon Pictures ISU Single Distances Speed

Jeremy wotherspoon 500 meter wereldrecord 34 03


Early career

Jeremy Wotherspoon Wotherspoon Can End Olympic Gold Shutout The New York Times

Wotherspoon was born in Humboldt, Saskatchewan, but grew up in Red Deer, Alberta. There he first became involved in speedskating after signing up for a power skating class in an effort to improve his ice hockey abilities. Initially, Wotherspoon competed in both short track and long track events. He eventually chose long track as a specialty and climbed through the junior ranks, moving to Calgary to train with the Canadian national team at the age of 17. Wotherspoon soon won medals on the World Cup circuit, with his first victories in 1997.

Jeremy Wotherspoon Jeremy Wotherspoon Photos World Sprint Speed Skating

Wotherspoon dominated sprint events and held world records in both the 500 m and 1000 m distances. He is a four-time World Sprint Champion, taking the title four times in five years between 1999 and 2003, and a 13-time World Cup Overall Champion on the 500 m and the 1000 m. During the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Wotherspoon won a silver medal in the 500 m, despite being the favorite.

Four years later, at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Wotherspoon fell at the start of his run during the 500 m, and finished 13th in the 1000 m event. The next Olympic Games in Turin in 2006, he failed to reach the podium once again, placing 9th in the 500 m event and 11th in the 1000 m. Wotherspoon, disappointed, decided to spend time alone on Mausund, a remote Norwegian island near the Arctic Circle. When asked whether he was anxious over skating after a season away from the sport, he stated "I'm more interested to see how quickly I can get back up."

2010 Olympics and first retirement

Following his time in Norway, Wotherspoon set a world record in the 500 m event on November 9, 2007. However, he later suffered an arm injury while skating in the 2008–09 World Cup season. On December 27, 2009, Wotherspoon officially secured his spot for the 500 m and 1000 m events at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver after finishing first in the Canadian trials held at the Calgary Olympic Oval. Despite this, Wotherspoon placed 9th and 14th in the Olympic events, respectively.

Wotherspoon announced his retirement from speed skating on December 6, 2009, promising to do so following the Vancouver Olympics and the 2010 season end.

Comeback

Wotherspoon announced that he was returning to speedskating in June 2013 with the aim of competing at the 2014 Winter Olympics. He failed, however, to qualify in his signature event, the 500 m sprint, and was not named to Canada's Olympic team.

Post-retirement

Following his initial retirement in 2010, Wotherspoon coached at an academy in Inzell, German, training skaters from countries without coaches, facilities or formal programs. He returned there after his 2014 comeback attempt, then moved to a developmental team in Norway. In April 2016 Wotherspoon became the sprint coach for Norway's national team, with the aim of ending that nation's three-decade Olympic medal drought in long track's sprint events.

Personal life

Wotherspoon was born in Humboldt, Saskatchewan, but grew up in Red Deer, Alberta. He is married to former Canadian speed skater and 2006 Olympian Kim Weger; the couple has a daughter, Ella.

World records

Source: SpeedSkatingStats.com.

Since November 23, 1997, Wotherspoon has held the world record for the sprint combination: the point summation of four races (2x500 m and 2x1000 m) skated consecutively within two or three days, like those calculated for the World Sprint Speed Skating Championships. He improved on his own record five times since. His fastest combination was 135.355 (34.03, 34.14, 1:07.34, 1:07.03), accomplished during World Cup races at the Utah Olympic Oval in November 2007, but this was not an official world record.

Furthermore, Wotherspoon has skated the six of the ten fastest laps (400 m) ever, the fastest of which was a 24.32 s lap in his first 1000 m race in Salt Lake City in November 2007. His average speed in that lap was 59.21 kilometres per hour (36.79 mph).

References

Jeremy Wotherspoon Wikipedia


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