Dan Jansen
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Olympic medal record | |||
Men’s Speed Skating | |||
---|---|---|---|
Gold | 1994 Lillehammer | 1,000 m |
Daniel Erwin "Dan" Jansen (born June 17, 1965 in West Allis, Wisconsin, United States) is a former speed skater, best known for winning a gold medal in his final Olympic race after suffering through years of heartbreak.
Inspired by his sister Jane, Dan Jansen took up speedskating while growing up in Wisconsin. He set a junior world record in the 500 meter race at the age of sixteen, and finished sixteenth in the 500 meters and fourth in the 1,000 meters at the 1984 Winter Olympics.
At the 1988 Winter Olympics, Jansen – having become World Sprint Champion one week before the Olympics – was a favorite for the 500 and 1,000 meter races, having improved in the years between Olympics, while overcoming a case of mononucleosis in 1987. However, on the day of the race, he received a phone call saying that Jane was dying of leukemia. Several hours after speaking to his dying sister, he was informed that she had died. That night, he fell while competing in the 500 meters. On the 1,000 meters later in those Olympics, he fell again and left with no medals.
Jansen arrived at the 1992 Winter Olympics as a favorite yet again. A year before, he had set a world record in the 500 meters among his other accomplishments. But disaster struck again, as he finished fourth in the 500 meters and twenty-sixth in the 1,000 meters. So once again, Jansen left the Olympics with no medals.
In 1994, Jansen won his second World Sprint Championships title and the 1994 Winter Olympics were Jansen's final attempt to win an Olympic medal of any kind. Between the 1992 and 1994 Olympics, he had the distinction of being the only man to break 36 seconds in the 500 meters, doing so four times in those years. In the 500 meters, he finished eighth, and he went into the 1,000 meters under the assumption that he would end his career without any Olympic medals. However, coached by the 1976 Olympic Champion on that same distance, Peter Mueller, he won his first and only Olympic gold medal of his career, setting a new world record in the process, and he dedicated his gold medal to his late sister. For his efforts, Jansen received the 1994 James E. Sullivan Award.
Jansen was inducted into the United States Olympic Hall of Fame in 2004. Today, Jansen is a speed skating commentator for NBC and, since 2005, the skating coach for the Chicago Blackhawks of the National Hockey League. He has also set up the Dan Jansen Foundation in memory of his sister, with the purpose of fighting leukemia.
[edit] World records
Over the course of his career, Jansen skated 8 world records:
Distance | Result | Date | Location |
---|---|---|---|
500 m | 36.41 | 25 January 1992 | Davos |
500 m | 36.41 | 19 March 1993 | Calgary |
500 m | 36.02 | 20 March 1993 | Calgary |
Sprint combination | 145.580 | 20 March 1993 | Calgary |
500 m | 35.92 | 4 December 1993 | Hamar |
500 m | 35.76 | 30 January 1994 | Calgary |
Sprint combination | 144.815 | 30 January 1994 | Calgary |
1,000 m | 1:12.43 | 18 February 1994 | Hamar |
[edit] Personal records
Distance | Result | Date | Location |
---|---|---|---|
500 m | 35.76 | 30 January 1994 | Calgary |
1,000 m | 1:12.43 | 18 February 1994 | Hamar |
1,500 m | 1:55.62 | 14 March 1993 | Heerenveen |
3,000 m | 4:25.63 | 5 March 1983 | Sarajevo |
5,000 m | 7:50.22 | 7 February 1982 | Inzell |
[edit] References
- Dan Jansen at SkateResults.com
- Personal records from The Skatebase
- Biography from ESPN Classic
- The Dan Jansen Foundation
- Dan Jansens official website
- Dan Jansen's U.S. Olympic Team bio
- Dan Jansen Skates into Second Season as Chicago Skating Coach at NHL.com. 28 Sept 2006.
Olympic champions in men's 1000 m speed skating |
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1976: Peter Mueller | 1980: Eric Heiden | 1984: Gaétan Boucher | 1988: Nikolay Gulyayev | 1992: Olaf Zinke | 1994: Dan Jansen | 1998: Ids Postma | 2002: Gerard van Velde | 2006: Shani Davis |
Categories: 1965 births | Living people | American speed skaters | James E. Sullivan Award recipients | Olympic competitors for the United States | Speed skaters at the 1984 Winter Olympics | Speed skaters at the 1988 Winter Olympics | Speed skaters at the 1992 Winter Olympics | Speed skaters at the 1994 Winter Olympics | People from Wisconsin | Winter Olympics medalists