Eric Flaim

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Olympic medal record
Men’s Speed Skating
Silver 1988 Calgary 1,500 m
Men’s Short track speed skating
Silver 1994 Lillehammer 5,000 m relay

Eric Joseph Flaim (born 9 March 1967 in Pembroke, Massachusetts) is a former speed skater from the United States.

Eric Flaim started in short track speed skating, but then, like many short track speed skaters before and after him, switched to long track speed skating. As a junior, he did not stand out, not even finishing within the top 20 at the two Junior World Allround Championships he competed in. As a senior, he participated in his first World Allround Championships in 1987 in Heerenveen. He finished 17th, meaning he had failed to qualify for the final distance (the 10,000 m) by just one position.

The next year (1988), Flaim had his best season. Before a home crowd, he won bronze at the World Sprint Championships. Two weeks later, at the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Flaim started in the first pair on the 1,500 m and immediately broke Igor Zhelezovski's world record. This would not be the new world record, though, because two pairs later, East German skater André Hoffmann set an even faster time. Flaim's time, however, would remain the second fastest 1,500 m time and so he earned Olympic silver. Another two weeks later, in Oslo, he became World Allround Champion.

In 1989, Flaim won the 1,000 m World Cup, a first place shared with Austrian skater Michael Hadschieff. Flaim would never match his 1988 results again, though. He underwent knee surgery in 1990 and had several illnesses afterwards. In 1992, he seemed to be on his way to a comeback when he finished first in one of the eight 1,000 m races to determine the 1,000 m World Cup winner (a World Cup in which he eventually finished 5th), but during the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, after a 6th place in the 5,000 m, a case of food-poisoning before his 1,500 m race ruined his chances for the rest of the Olympics. After disappointing results at the World Sprint Championships and World Allround Championships that same year, Flaim withdrew from long track speed skating and returned to short track speed skating.

At the 1994 Winter Olympics, he won his second Olympic silver medal – this time in short track skating – as part of the United States team in the 5,000 m relay. This made him the first skater to win Olympic medals in two different winter disciplines (though not the first skater to win Olympic medals in two different disciplines – that honour goes to Christa Rothenburger). Flaim participated in his fourth and last Olympics during the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano.

[edit] Personal records

Distance Time Date Location
500 m 36.98 23 January 1988 Calgary
1,000 m 1:13.53 18 February 1988 Calgary
1,500 m 1:52.12 20 February 1988 Calgary
3,000 m 4:02.64 11 December 1988 Calgary
5,000 m 6:47.09 17 February 1988 Calgary
10,000 m 14:05.57 21 February 1988 Calgary

Flaim was number one on the Adelskalender, the all-time allround speed skating ranking, from 17 February 1988 to 21 March 1992 – a total of 1,494 days. He has an Adelskalender score of 157.340 points.

[edit] References


Leaders of the Adelskalender

Rudolf Ericsson - Peder Østlund - Jaap Eden - Oscar Mathisen - Ivar Ballangrud - Michael Staksrud - Åke Seyffarth - Nikolay Mamonov - Hjalmar Andersen - Boris Shilkov - Dmitriy Sakunenko - Juhanni Järvinen - Knut Johannesen - Jonny Nilsson - Per Ivar Moe - Eduard Matusevich - Ard Schenk - Kees Verkerk - Magne Thomassen - Hans van Helden - Vladimir Lobanov - Jan Egil Storholt - Sergey Marchuk - Vladimir Belov - Eric Heiden - Viktor Shasherin - Andrej Bobrov - Nikolay Gulyayev - Michael Hadschieff - Eric Flaim - Johann Olav Koss - Falko Zandstra - Rintje Ritsma - Gianni Romme - Jochem Uytdehaage - Chad Hedrick

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