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| Event type

1,500 metres, Men

Date16 February 1994 — 14:00
StatusOlympic
LocationOlympiahall, Hamar
Participants44 from 17 countries
Olympic Record 1:52.06 WR / André Hoffmann GDR / 20 February 1988 / Details
StarterSvein Inge StrugstadNOR
RefereeKnut LudahlNOR

After his dominant win in the 5000 m, Johann Olav Koss was heavily favored to win the 1,500 m as well. Koss was the defending champion, and he had won the pre-Olympic World Cup on the Hamar rink back in December. But he faced stiff competition from both his own country and the Netherlands. Koss’ team mate Ådne Søndrål, had won two World Cup races earlier in the season, and had finished second behind Koss in the Albertville Games. Of the Dutch skaters, Falko Zandstra and Rintje Ritsma had the best chances. Zandstra had won the Davos World Cup, while Ritsma had won the distance at the European Championships in January in Hamar. Ritsma had then bettered the world record - which still dated from the 1988 Olympics - to 1:51.60.

Koss was the first of these favorites to race. Skating a final lap that was unheard of (29.38), he managed to beat Ritsma’s world best mark by 0.31 seconds, setting it at 1:51.29. Next up was Søndrål. While a sprinter, he couldn’t match Koss’s splits early on, and never came close to his compatriot’s time, despite setting a personal best of 1:53.13. In the next pair, it was Zandstra. At the bell, the Dutch World Allround Champion was about equal with Koss, but his final lap was over a second slower than the Norwegian’s. Ritsma, going in pair six, met with the same fate. Leading by two tenths at 1,100 m, he lost a lot in the last 400 m, ending up with 1:51.99, slightly outside his own former world record. At the victory press conference, Johann Olav Koss announced he would donate his victory reward to the victims of the war in Bosnia, and especially Sarajevo, the host of the 1984 Winter Olympics that had been ravaged by war.

PosCompetitorNOCTime
1Johann Olav KossNOR1:51.29GoldWR
2Rintje RitsmaNED1:51.99Silver
3Falko ZandstraNED1:52.38Bronze
4Ådne SøndrålNOR1:53.13
5Andrey AnufriyenkoRUS1:53.16
6Peter AdebergGER1:53.50
7Neal MarshallCAN1:53.56
8Martin HersmanNED1:53.59
9Jeroen StraathofNED1:53.70
10Yuriy ShulhaUKR1:54.28
11Paweł JaroszekPOL1:54.49
12Roberto SighelITA1:54.51
13Olaf ZinkeGER1:54.66
14Kjell StorelidNOR1:54.69
15Toru AoyanagiJPN1:54.85
16Oleg PavlovRUS1:54.90
17Michael HadschieffAUT1:55.09
18Steinar JohansenNOR1:55.21
19Thomas KummGER1:55.35
20Michael SpielmannGER1:55.36
21Yukinori MiyabeJPN1:55.56
=22Roland BrunnerAUT1:55.78
=22Dave TamburrinoUSA1:55.78
24Pat KellyCAN1:55.81
25Danny KahAUS1:56.04
26Zsolt BalóROU1:56.44
27Toshihiko ItokawaJPN1:56.67
28Kevin ScottCAN1:56.68
29Radik BikchentayevKAZ1:56.73
30Vadim SayutinKAZ1:57.03
31Dezideriu HorvathROU1:57.07
32Brian WanekUSA1:57.09
33Sergey TsybenkoKAZ1:57.43
34Davide CartaITA1:57.46
35Vitali NovichenkaBLR1:57.50
36Phillip TahmindjisAUS1:57.59
37Nathaniel MillsUSA1:58.43
38Pat BouchardCAN1:59.83
39KC BoutietteUSA2:00.59
40Paweł ZygmuntPOL2:05.21fall
41Lee Jae-SikKOR2:20.60fall
DNFAlessandro De TaddeiITAfall
DNFLiu YanfeiCHNfall
DNFArtur SzafrańskiPOLfall