Henk van der Grift
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Hendrik ("Henk") van der Grift (born 25 December 1935 in Breukelen, the Netherlands) is a former speed skater.
Henk van der Grift participated in the 1960 Winter Olympics. On the 500 m, he finished 10th and he fell on the 1,500 m. Not satisfied with training facilities in the Netherlands, he lived in Norway for a while, working as a car mechanic. The superior training facilities in Norway paid off and Van der Grift won silver at the 1961 European Allround Championships behind Olympic Champion Viktor Kosichkin. This was the first Dutch medal in international championships in eight years and it made Van der Grift one of the favourites for the World Allround Championships.
And Van der Grift delivered: In what turned out to be his greatest year, he became the 1961 World Allround Champion in Gothenburg. On the 500 m during those championships, he finished second behind Soviet sprinter Yevgeny Grishin. He then lost many points on the 5,000 m, but he overcame that deficit by winning the 1,500 m. On the final distance (the 10,000 m), he seemed to be losing his lead, surrendering one second each lap to Viktor Kosichkin. But Van der Grift managed to skate his final two laps fast enough to retain his lead, narrowly edging out Kosichkin by a margin of just 0.162 points (equivalent to 3.24 seconds of difference on the 10,000 m).
His victory made Van der Grift the first Dutch World Allround Champion in more than 55 years – Coen de Koning had been the last in 1905. As a result of his victory, he was elected Dutch Sportsman of the year (a title shared with Judo giant Anton Geesink) and he received the 1961 Oscar Mathisen Award.
In 1962, Van der Grift became Dutch Allround Champion, but he did not manage to successfully defend his World Champion title that year – after three of the four distances, Van der Grift was in second place behind Boris Stenin, but despite Stenin's bad result on the final distance and Van der Grift overtaking Stenin, Van der Grift still finished second behind Kosichkin. The following season, he fell ill and ended his speed skating career.
[edit] References
Preceded by: Eef Kamerbeek |
Dutch Sportsman of the Year 1961 |
Succeeded by: Henk Nijdam |
Preceded by: Boris Stenin |
Oscar Mathisen Award 1961 |
Succeeded by: Jonny Nilsson |