Rolf Falk-Larssen
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Rolf Falk-Larssen (born 21 February 1960 in Trondheim, Norway) is a former speedskater.
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[edit] Short biography
Rolf Falk-Larssen made his international debut at the European Allround Championships of 1982 and he was in the lead after three distances. On the final distance (the 10,000 m), he was paired against Tomas Gustafson, the number two after three distances. With just one lap left to go in that 10,000 m, it seemed that Falk-Larssen would be crowned as the new European Champion, but Gustafson skated an extraordinary last lap, setting a new world record of 14:23.59, and beating Falk-Larssen (who skated a great 14:30.34 – a new Norwegian record) by 0.021 points (equivalent to just 0.42 seconds of difference on the 10,000 m). So Falk-Larssen won silver and he would win a second European Allround silver medal in 1984. Three weeks later, at the 1982 World Allround Championships, Falk-Larssen won bronze.
In 1983, at the age of 22, Falk-Larssen won the World Allround Championships in Oslo. Winning three out of four distances, he managed to leave Tomas Gustafson behind before the final distance, the 10,000 m. Falk-Larssen finished the 10,000 m in 13th place, 37 seconds behind Gustafson, and if samalog points had been used, he would have been number two. However, the rule at the time was that anyone who won three distances was World Champion (a remnant from pre-WWI days, when a skater had to win three at least distances to become World Champion). The crowd thought Falk-Larssen did not give 100% during the final 10,000 m race, and he was booed during many of the laps. This was the first and only time in history that the World Champion had a worse samalog score than the number two, and it eventually resulted in the abolishment of the three-distance-wins rule in favour of ranking by samalog points exclusively (from 1987 onwards). For his accomplishments in 1984, Falk-Larssen received the Oscar Mathisen Award.
Being a typical allrounder, Falk-Larssen was not specialised enough to win an Olympic medal; he participated in the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo and the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, but his best result in six races during those two Olympics was only a 12th place. Falk-Larssen twice held world records in the allround small combination (500 m - 3,000 m - 1,500 m - 5,000 m), in 1982 and 1983. Falk-Larssen competed internationally until 1993. He won numerous medals at various Norwegian Championships.
[edit] Medals
An overview of medals won by Falk-Larssen at important championships he participated in, listing the years in which he won each:
Championships | Gold medal | Silver medal | Bronze medal |
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Winter Olympics | |||
World Allround | 1983 | 1982 | |
World Sprint | |||
European Allround | 1982 1984 |
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Norwegian Allround | 1982 1983 1984 1985 1988 |
1986 | |
Norwegian Sprint | 1982 1987 |
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Norwegian Single Distance | 1988 (1,000 m) 1988 (1,500 m) 1993 (1,500 m) |
1988 (500 m) 1993 (5,000 m) 1994 (1,000 m) |
[edit] World records
Over the course of his career, Falk-Larssen skated two world records:
Distance | Result | Date | Location |
---|---|---|---|
Small combination | 162.734 | 17 January 1982 | Davos |
Small combination | 161.758 | 23 January 1983 | Davos |
[edit] Personal records
Distance | Result | Date | Location |
---|---|---|---|
500 m | 37.88 | 5 March 1988 | Medeo |
1,000 m | 1:15.42 | 18 February 1988 | Calgary |
1,500 m | 1:54.26 | 21 March 1987 | Heerenveen |
3,000 m | 4:02.79 | 19 March 1987 | Heerenveen |
5,000 m | 6:50.93 | 4 December 1987 | Calgary |
10,000 m | 14:30.34 | 31 January 1982 | Oslo |
Falk-Larssen has an Adelskalender score of 160.576 points. His highest ranking on the Adelskalender was a 9th place.
Preceded by Tomas Gustafson |
Oscar Mathisen Award 1983 |
Succeeded by Gaétan Boucher |