Tomas Gustafson

This article is about the speed skater. For other uses, see Tomas Gustafson (disambiguation).
Tomas Gustafson

Gustafson in 2010
Personal information
Birth name Sven Tomas Gustafson
Nationality Swedish
Born 28 December 1959 (1959-12-28) (age 56)
Katrineholm, Sweden
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Weight 70 kg (154 lb)
Spouse(s) Elisabet Gustafson
Sport
Country  Sweden
Sport Speed skating
Turned pro 1979
Retired 1992
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s) 500 m: 38.10 (1990)
1000 m: 1:18.48 (1981)
1500 m: 1:53.22 (1990)
3000 m: 4:03.17 (1987)
5000 m: 6:44.51 (1987)
10 000 m: 13:48.20 (1988)

Sven Tomas Gustafson (born 28 December 1959) is a retired Swedish speed skater, and one of the most successful distance skaters of the 1980s.


Early career

Born in Katrineholm, he won the World Junior Championships title, in Grenoble, France, in 1979. One year later, at the European Championships of seniors, he finished 4th. One month after that, he participated in the 1980 Winter Olympics at Lake Placid, New York, with a 7th place on the 1500 m as his best performance. In that same month, he defended his Junior World title.

1982 to Sarajevo leadup

In 1982, he became allround European Champion in Oslo, where he set the 10000 m world record. This has turned out to be the last outdoor World record for men on a lowland track so far. Because of this performance, he was awarded the Oscar Mathisen Award, an award for the best skating performance in the past season. One year later, on the same Norwegian ice, he won silver at the World Allround Championships, finishing second behind Rolf Falk-Larssen. Gustafson had the best allround point-sum (samalog), but Falk-Larssen won by the rule that a skater winning three distances, and merely having finished the fourth, is automatically pronounced the champion. This caused a renewed debate about the three-distance-wins rule which was subsequently abolished; from 1984 onwards, the champion was to be the skater with the best allround point-sum.

Sarajevo to Calgary leadup

One year later, his focus was not on the allround championships, but on the 1984 Winter Olympics at Sarajevo. He won Olympic gold on the 5,000 m, ahead of Soviet skater Igor Malkov by a mere two hundredths of a second. In the 10000 m, he once more found himself again in a close finish with Malkov, this time losing the battle by five hundredths of a second. After these Olympics, Gustafson struggled through knee surgery, meningitis, and the death of his father.

Calgary glory

But in the Olympic year 1988, he had regained his form and strength. In January, he announced his Olympic ambitions by winning the European Allround Championships in The Hague, winning all four distances, an achievement no one else has been able to reach in post-war speedskating. With his nemesis Malkov retired, Gustafson knew he had to focus on outpacing long-distance skaters like Dutchmen Leo Visser and Gerard Kemkers and Austrian skater Michael Hadschieff. Gustafson managed to do so first in the 5000 m in a grand way. He trailed Leo Visser's pace by eight hundredths of a second with only 400 m to go. However, he skated an exceptional final lap to win by one third of a second. Four days later, he won Olympic Gold again, this time in the 10000 m, setting an impressive world record time of 13:48.20. This record lasted for three years, when it was broken by Johann Olav Koss. As a result, Gustafson received the Oscar Mathisen Award again for his performances in 1988. He also earned the Svenska Dagbladet Gold Medal as well.

Life after the Winter Olympics

After the 1988 Winter Olympics, Gustafson remained a speedskater for four more years. His only notable achievement after Calgary was finishing second behind Bart Veldkamp in the 1990 European Allround Championships.

At the 1992 Winter Olympics at Albertville, he only participated in the 5000 m, finishing 13th. This was Gustafson's last international race.

Except for the Allround World Championship, Tomas Gustafson achieved everything he ever aimed for in speedskating: three Olympic gold medals, one Olympic silver medal, and setting the 10,000 m world record twice.

At the 1998 Winter Olympics, his wife, Elisabet Gustafson, won a bronze medal in curling.

Records

World records

Over the course of his career, Gustafson skated two world records:

DisciplineTimeDateLocation
10,000 m14.23,59January 31, 1982Norway Oslo
10,000 m13.48,20February 21, 1988Canada Calgary

Source: SpeedSkatingStats.com[1]

Personal records

DistanceTimeDateLocation
500 m38.1019 January 1990Heerenveen
1000 m1:18.4815 March 1981Savalen
1500 m1:53.228 December 1990Calgary
3000 m4:03.1726 December 1987Calgary
5000 m6:44.514 December 1987Inzell
10000 m13:48.2021 February 1988Calgary
Big combination160.34721 January 1990Heerenveen

Gustafson has an Adelskalender score of 157.701 points. In March 1988 he put himself on third place of the ranking, behind Eric Flaim and Michael Hadschieff. After improving his personal best time in the 1500 metres distance in December 1990, he reached the second place. Gustafson was ranked among the top 3 for 1468 days.

References

  1. "Tomas Gustafson". SpeedSkatingStats.com. Retrieved 29 August 2012.
Awards
Preceded by
Norway Amund Sjøbrend
Oscar Mathisen Award
1982
Succeeded by
Norway Rolf Falk-Larssen
Preceded by
Soviet Union Nikolay Gulyayev
Oscar Mathisen Award
1988
Succeeded by
Netherlands Leo Visser
Preceded by
Swedish men's ice hockey team
and
Marie-Helene Westin
Svenska Dagbladet Gold Medal
1988
Succeeded by
Sweden national table tennis team
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