Date | 13 February 1928 — 13:00 | |
---|---|---|
Status | Olympic | |
Location | Olympia-Eisstadion Badrutts Park, St. Moritz | |
Participants | 33 from 14 countries | |
Olympic Record | 8:39.0 / Clas Thunberg FIN / 26 January 1924 | |
Starter | Hermann Kleeberg | GER |
Referee | Henning Olsen | NOR |
The 5000 m was heavily influenced by the weather. As the race progressed, wind and snow grew stronger, and ice conditions deteriorated. This placed the skaters who had been drawn late in the competition at a disadvantage. The first favorite to hit the ice was Ivar Ballangrud. The 24-year-old Norwegian was the 1926 World Champion, and had won the 5 km race at the World Championships in Davos just a week ago. He took great advantage of the weather conditions in his race, skating a steady race and lapping his Lithuanian opponent. His time of 8:50.5 was a far cry from the times skated in Davos, where Ballangrud had approached the World Record (which stood at 8:26.5).
Bernt Evensen took off faster than Ballangrud, and had the fastest time until two-thirds of the race, when he faded and finished ten seconds behind his countryman. His time was approached by the best American distance skater, Irving Jaffee of New York. He gained on Evensen every lap, but ended up 0.2 seconds short. 38-year-old Finnish veteran Julius Skutnabb had a similar build up, but won two seconds on the Norwegian in the final lap, moving into silver medal position.
By then, weather conditions had become really tough. Norwegian Armand Carlsen came within half a second of the bronze medal, and would likely have medalled had it not been for the snow. Other favorites finished further back, including two 5000 m medalists from the recent World Championships, Michael Staksrud (NOR) and Clas Thunberg (FIN). Thunberg’s luck was especially bad, considering that he had originally been drawn in the third race. Because his pairmate, the Canadian Gorman, didn’t show up, he was moved to the end of the competition to race Arthur Vollstedt.
Pos | Pair | Competitor | NOC | Time | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 4 | Ivar Ballangrud | NOR | 8:50.5 | Gold | ||
2 | 10 | Julius Skutnabb | FIN | 8:59.1 | Silver | ||
3 | 6 | Bernt Evensen | NOR | 9:01.1 | Bronze | ||
4 | 9 | Irving Jaffee | USA | 9:01.3 | |||
5 | 14 | Armand Carlsen | NOR | 9:01.5 | |||
6 | 11 | Valentine Bialas | USA | 9:06.3 | |||
7 | 15 | Michael Staksrud | NOR | 9:07.3 | |||
8 | 5 | Otto Polacsek | AUT | 9:08.9 | |||
9 | 3 | Gustaf Andersson | SWE | 9:09.7 | |||
10 | 2 | Ossi Blomqvist | FIN | 9:09.9 | |||
11 | 12 | Siem Heiden | NED | 9:10.0 | |||
12 | 16 | Clas Thunberg | FIN | 9:11.8 | |||
13 | 12 | Bertel Backman | FIN | 9:14.0 | |||
14 | 1 | Eddie Murphy | USA | 9:19.5 | |||
15 | 10 | Alberts Rumba | LAT | 9:19.7 | |||
16 | 15 | Fritz Jungblut | GER | 9:26.7 | |||
17 | 13 | John O'Neil Farrell | USA | 9:29.2 | |||
18 | 3 | Léon Quaglia | FRA | 9:33.3 | |||
19 | 8 | Wim Kos | NED | 9:34.2 | |||
20 | 8 | Zoltán Eötvös | HUN | 9:34.4 | 1 | ||
21 | 5 | Aleksander Mitt | EST | 9:35.2 | |||
22 | 7 | Ross Robinson | CAN | 9:38.9 | |||
23 | 2 | Cyril Horn | GBR | 9:45.0 | |||
24 | 9 | Christfried Burmeister | EST | 9:46.2 | |||
25 | 4 | Kęstutis Bulota | LTU | 9:49.8 | |||
26 | 11 | Rudolf Riedl | AUT | 9:53.5 | |||
27 | 1 | Fritz Moser | AUT | 9:57.8 | |||
28 | 16 | Arthur Vollstedt | GER | 9:58.5 | |||
29 | 17 | Willy Logan | CAN | 10:10.3 | |||
30 | 13 | Charles Thaon | FRA | 10:18.8 | |||
31 | 7 | Len Stewart | GBR | 10:40.0 | |||
32 | 6 | Fred Dix | GBR | 10:55.6 | |||
14 | Erhard Mayke | GER | – | ||||
– | Charlie Gorman | CAN | – |