Sleepless nights for Kramer after 10km failure
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[February 19, 2018]
(Reuters) - Dutch speed skater
Sven Kramer is still having sleepless nights over his failure in the
Olympic 10,000 meters race but is trying to take consolation from
his record-breaking 5,000 performance.
The 31-year-old became the first male speed skater to get a third
consecutive Olympic gold medal in the same event in the 5,000m but a
maiden 10,000 title again proved elusive.
“It has affected me to my core and I am struggling to deal with it
and, of course, it is keeping me up at nights,” Kramer told Dutch
television at the Games.
“I am trying to put things in perspective and trying to enjoy what I
have achieved. I had difficulty doing that in the past but I think
I’m doing it better now.”
Kramer was all set for a grandstand triumph in the 10,000m as he
went last in Gangneung but never found his rhythm to finish sixth
and continue a personal curse in the event.
Eight years ago in Vancouver, Kramer crossed the line first but was
disqualified for choosing the wrong lane and he had to settle for
silver in Sochi four years ago after finishing behind team mate
Jorrit Bergsma.
Kramer, who has won the 10,000m on five occasions at the world
championships and broken the world record three times, was highly
fancied to break his duck in Pyeongchang.
He refuted the suggestion that he was spooked by the time of 12
minutes 39.77 seconds set by Canada’s Ted-Jan Bloemen, which proved
good enough for gold.
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Pyeongchang 2018 Winter Olympics – Men’s 10000m competition finals –
Gangneung Oval - Gangneung, South Korea – February 15, 2018 - Sven
Kramer of the Netherlands competes. REUTERS/John Sibley
“I am the last to deny that the mental aspect plays a role but I
went to the ice rink with the assumption that I would need to come
home in around 12 minutes and 40 seconds to win," Kramer said.
"So I wasn’t going ‘wow, how hard’ when I saw Ted-Jan’s time. But it
just didn’t happen for me.”
Kramer had previously said he would skate for two more years but now
the 10,000m gold in Beijing in four years times might be tempting
him.
“I’m not ruling it out but at the moment I’m not thinking about it.
I’m taking it from year-to-year. Is my career not complete unless I
have the 10km gold? That is a question I will have to ask myself. My
body and spirit, in any case, continue to be strong.”
(Reporting by Mark Gleeson,; Editing by Ed Osmond)
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