Lee Wins 10,000 Gold in Record Time After Favorite DQ'd
Stunning Gold: A Korean distance speedster adds a surprise gold to his silver medal.
Lee Seung-hoon of South Korea won a stunning gold medal in men’s 10,000-meter speedskating Tuesday when overwhelming favorite Sven Kramer made an amateurish mistake, failing to switch lanes just past the midway point of the race, and was disqualified.
Kramer finished about 4 seconds ahead of Lee, but it didn’t matter. The South Korean already was celebrating on the infield while the Dutch world-record holder was finishing his race, apparently unaware of what he had done.
When Kramer came across the line, he threw up his arms to celebrate what he thought was his second gold medal of the Vancouver Games. Then, as he was coasting along on the backstretch, the victory celebration suddenly ended.
Dutch coach Gerard Kemkers told the skater what he had done. Kramer reacted with disbelief, then slung away his glasses in disgust.
“It is pretty hard now,” Kramer said. “I was on my way to make the right decision and right before the corner I changed my decision because of the advice from the (coach). At the end of the day, it is my responsibility. I am the skater on the ice, I have to do it.”
Lee won with an Olympic-record time of 12 minutes, 58.55 seconds, breaking the mark of 12:58.92 set by Jochem Uytdehaage of the Netherlands at the 2002 Salt Lake City Games.
The silver went Ivan Skobrev of Russia (13:02.07), while defending Olympic champion Bob de Jong ended up with an unexpected bronze (13:06.73).
But this will always be known as the race that one of the surest bests in these games let get away, because he failed to abide by the most basic of rules.
In long track speedskating, the competitors switch lanes each time they go down the backstretch to even up the distance they cover. On the 17th of 25 laps, Kramer messed up.
The Dutchman had already won the 5,000 in dominating fashion, setting an Olympic record, and seemed a lock to become the fourth athlete from his speedskating-mad nation to sweep the two longest events on the men’s program.
Instead, the gold went to Lee, who had won silver in the 5,000.
“I expected to be on the podium but not for the gold,” Lee said. “I could not have realized that this would have happened. I trained and prepared long for this. Sven Kramer is a great skater.”
While the three medalists celebrated, Kramer sat alone on a bench along the front straightaway, trying to figure out what went wrong.
The mistake occurred with eight laps to go after Kramer came off the first turn in the inside lane, which means it was time for him to shift over to the outside lane by the end of the back straightaway.
As Kramer approached the cone that a skater must be on either side of before he heads into the far turn, he was on the outside while getting hand instructions from Kemkers.
Suddenly, either because of a wrong command or a miscommunication, Kramer made the sudden decision to go inside. He actually wound up going across the cone with his left leg in the inside lane and his right leg in the air over the outside lane. Then he hopped into the inside lane.
The crowd recognized something was wrong when Kramer and the other skater in the final pair, Skobrev, skated the rest of the race in the same lane.
But it was news to Kramer until he crossed the line.
2/23/2010 5:59 PM PAUL NEWBERRY, AP National Writer RICHMOND, British Columbia
New Olympic record holder Korea's Lee Seung-Hoon, left, passes in the same lane as he overtakes Netherlands's Arjen van de Kieft, right, during the men's 10,000 meter speed skating race at the Richmond Olympic Oval at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia, Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2010. (AP Photo/Kevin Frayer)