Tomas Gustafson

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NationalitySwedish
BornSven Tomas Gustafson
28 December 1959 (1959-12-28) (age 66)
Katrineholm, Sweden
Height1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Weight70 kg (154 lb)
Tomas Gustafson
Gustafson in 2010
Personal information
NationalitySwedish
BornSven Tomas Gustafson
28 December 1959 (1959-12-28) (age 66)
Katrineholm, Sweden
Height1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Weight70 kg (154 lb)
Spouse
Elisabet Gustafson
Sport
Country Sweden
SportSpeed skating
Turned pro1979
Retired1992
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)
Medal record
Men's speed skating
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place1984 Sarajevo5000 m
Gold medal – first place1988 Calgary5000 m
Gold medal – first place1988 Calgary10,000 m
Silver medal – second place1984 Sarajevo10,000 m
World Championships
Silver medal – second place1983 OsloAllround
European Championships
Gold medal – first place1982 OsloAllround
Gold medal – first place1988 The HagueAllround
Silver medal – second place1990 HeerenveenAllround
Bronze medal – third place1986 OsloAllround

Sven Tomas Gustafson (born 28 December 1959) is a retired Swedish speed skater and distance skater, active in the 1980s, who won several events and set world records.

Born in Katrineholm, he won the World Junior Championships title in Grenoble, France, in 1979. A year later, at the European Championships for seniors, he finished 4th. The following month, he participated in the 1980 Winter Olympics at Lake Placid, New York, US achieving a 7th place finish in the 1500 m as his best performance. Later 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 a 10,000 m world record. As of 2017 this was the last outdoor world record for men on a lowland track.[citation needed] For this performance, he was awarded the Oscar Mathisen Award for the best skating performance of the season. A year later, on the same track, he won silver at the World Allround Championships, finishing second behind Rolf Falk-Larssen. Gustafson had the better allround point total (samalog), but Falk-Larssen was declared champion due to a rule stating that a skater winning three of the four distances and finishing the fourth was automatically pronounced the champion. This result caused a renewed debate about the three-distance-wins rule, which was subsequently abolished. From 1984 onwards, the champion was determined by the skater with the best samalog point sum.

Sarajevo to Calgary leadup

The following year, his focus shifted from the World Allround Championships to the 1984 Winter Olympics at Sarajevo. He won Olympic gold in the 5,000 m, finishing just two hundredths of a second ahead of Soviet skater Igor Malkov. In the 10,000 m he again faced a close finish with Malkov, this time losing by five hundredths of a second. Following these Olympics, Gustafson underwent knee surgery, contracted meningitis, and his father died.[1]

Calgary

In January 1988, he won the European Allround Championships in The Hague, the only speedskater to win at all four distances since the Second World War. His rival Malkov had retired, and Gustafson focused on outpacing long-distance skaters such as Dutchmen Leo Visser and Gerard Kemkers and Austrian skater Michael Hadschieff. Gustafson first succeeded in the 5000 m. He trailed Leo Visser's pace by eight hundredths of a second with only 400 m remaining but skated a strong final lap to win by one third of a second. Four days later, he won Olympic gold again, this time in the 10,000 m, setting a new world record time of 13:48.20, broken three years later by Johann Olav Koss. Gustafson received the Oscar Mathisen Award again for his 1988 performances. He also earned the Svenska Dagbladet Gold Medal and the Jerring Award.[2]

Late career

Gustafson's only notable achievement after the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary was a second-place finish behind Bart Veldkamp in the 1990 European Allround Championships. At the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, he only took part in the 5000 m race, finishing 13th; this was Gustafson's last international race.

Personal life

Gustafson is married to curler Elisabet Gustafson.[1]

Records

References

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