Lee Sang-hwa

Lee Sang-hwa
Personal information
Born (1989-02-25) 25 February 1989
Height 1.65 m (5 ft 5 in)
Weight 62 kg (137 lb)
Sport
Country  South Korea
Sport Speed skating
Lee Sang-hwa
Hangul 이상화
Hanja 李相花
Revised Romanization I Sang-hwa
McCune–Reischauer Ri Sang-hwa

Lee Sang-hwa (Korean: 이상화, Hanja: 李相花, Korean pronunciation: [i.saŋ.ɦwa]; born 25 February 1989) is a South Korean speed skater who specialises in the sprint distances. She is a two-time Olympic champion in 500 metres (2010 and 2014) and the 2010 World Sprint champion. She is the current world record holder in women's 500 metres with the time of 36.36 seconds set in Salt Lake City on 16 November 2013,[1] and also holds the South Korean record on 1000 metres.[2] She has also won three World Championships medals in 500 metres, and has placed in the top three in World Cup events four times in this distance. Her first World Cup victory, however, came on the non-Olympic distance 100 metres. On the 1000 metres, however, she has never placed higher than fifth in international events (2010 World Sprint Championships, first 1000 metres).

Early life and education

Lee Sang-hwa was born in 1989 to Lee U-geun (father), a technician at Hwigyeong Girls' School, and Kim In-sun (mother). Lee has an older brother, Lee Sang-jun, who used to be a skater, too. Influenced by her brother, she started skating when she was in first grade at Eunseok Elementary School. Although her brother excelled at skating, and won a skating competition held in his elementary school, Lee appeared to have more talent for skating than him. Since their parents could not afford to support the extra activity of both children, only she continued skating.[3][4]

Lee is remembered by her school teachers as a smart and active student. Lee and Mo Tae-bum, gold medalist at Vancouver 2010, are close friends since their elementary school period. Along with him, Lee is currently attending Korea National Sport University.[5][6]

Career

Lee first competed internationally aged 14 in Canada, where she skated several test races in October 2003, winning comfortably and skating with a best time of 39.02 seconds. At the time, the U19 world record was 38.53. Her first ISU championship was in Roseville, Minnesota, during the 2004 World Junior Championships. As the youngest participant, she finished 16th, though she took third place on the 500 metres, 0.45 seconds behind world junior record holder Shannon Rempel.

The following season, she raced 38.77 in test races in Calgary, and was selected for the World Cup races in Nagano, Harbin and Calgary. She placed eighth in her first race, recording 38.71 in the M-Wave, Nagano, 0.29 seconds behind winner Wang Manli. She finished in the top ten a further five times that season, including two fourth-place finishes in 100 metre sprints, which gave her fifth place overall in the 100 metre World Cup. In other achievements, she won two senior Korean titles (on 2 × 500 metres and sprint), and came 14th in the 500 metres World Cup standings, 16th in the 1000 metres, and 15th in the samalog standings in the World Sprint Championships, though she was within half a second of the winner on both 500 metre races, finishing 9th and 12th.

In the World Championships, Lee won three medals that season; two in the junior championships, where she won bronze in the overall standings, though she was four points after the winner after 16th place on the 1500 and 19th on the 3000 metre event, and silver with the Korean team in the team pursuit event. And during the World Single Distance Championships in Inzell in March, two fourth-places were enough to take her to third place overall in the 500 metre competition, behind Chinese skaters Wang Manli and Wang Beixing.

In 2006, Lee improved on the 100 and 500 metres, though she fell into the B division on the 1000 metres. She finished on the World Cup podium four times during the season, including a win in the 100 metre World Cup final, though she finished behind Jenny Wolf in the overall standings. On the 500 metres, she was sixth in the World Cup. She also added three senior Korean titles to her record, winning the 500 metres, 1000 metres, and overall sprint championship. During the season, she registered a world junior record on the 500 metres, with a time of 37.90 in Utah Olympic Oval. She failed to improve on her 1000-metre time from last season, however.

The Turin Olympics ended with fifth place for Lee, despite her third-best second run which wasn't enough to lift her up more than one place. Earlier, she had finished 19th on the 1000 metres and 12th in the World Sprint Championships.

The 2007 season has seen further improvement for Lee. She is yet to finish outside the top two, and after three of 12 races she heads the overall standings on the 500 metres. She has also improved on the 1000 metres, and became 11th in the overall standings, with eighth place in Heerenveen.

At the 2010 Winter Olympics, Lee won her first Olympic gold medal in the women's 500 m becoming the first Asian woman ever to do so. She raced against Germany's Jenny Wolf, the world-record holder at the time, in both of her races. Although Wolf had the best time in the second of the two races, Lee edged her out by five hundredths of a second with a combined race time of 76.09 seconds to Wolf's 76.14 seconds.

On 9 November 2013, she broke the world record on 500 metres in the 2013–14 World Cup event in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, with a time of 36.74 seconds.[7][8] On 15 November, in the 2013–14 World Cup event in Salt Lake City, United States, she improved the record a further 17/100, to 36.57 seconds.[9] The next day, she improved it another 21/100, to 36.36 seconds.[10]

On 11 February 2014, she won her second Olympic gold medal in the women's 500 m at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics with an Olympic record of 74.70 seconds and successfully defended her crown from the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver. Lee's second run set the Olympic record of 37.28 seconds, giving her an aggregate time of 74.70 seconds. Russia's Olga Fatkulina finished second with an aggregate time of 75.06 seconds, and Margot Boer of the Netherlands came in third with an aggregate time of 75.48 seconds. She became the first woman since Catriona Le May Doan at the 2002 Olympics to defend the gold at the event and just the third woman ever to win back-to-back Olympic gold in the 500 metres,[11][12] and the first Asian woman ever to do so.

Lee competed in her fourth Winter Olympics at the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics, and won the silver, her third Olympic medal, in front of her home crowd. She was defeated by Japan's Nao Kodaira who was the other favourite coming into the event. Overcome with emotions upon finishing her lap, Lee burst into tears during the celebratory lap, and was consoled and embraced by her rival and friend, Kodaira. The scene of Lee and Kodaira embracing and congratulating each other, touched on many viewers and commentators worldwide, making it one of the most memorable moments of the 2018 Olympics.[13]

Records

Personal records

Personal records[14]
Women's speed skating
Event Result Date Location Notes
500 m36.3616 November 2013Utah Olympic Oval, Salt Lake CityCurrent world record.[1]
1000 m1:13.6621 September 2013Olympic Oval, CalgaryCurrent South Korean record.[2]
1500 m2:00.667 September 2013Olympic Oval, Calgary
3000 m4:23.6027 October 2002Olympic Oval, Calgary

World records

World records[15]
Women's speed skating
Event Result Date Location Notes
500 m36.8020 January 2013Olympic Oval, CalgaryWorld record until beaten by herself on 9 November 2013.[16]
500 m36.749 November 2013Olympic Oval, CalgaryWorld record until beaten by herself on 15 November 2013.[16]
500 m36.5715 November 2013Utah Olympic Oval, Salt Lake CityWorld record until beaten by herself on 16 November 2013.[16]
500 m36.3616 November 2013Utah Olympic Oval, Salt Lake CityCurrent world record.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "World Records". www.speedskatingresults.com. Retrieved 26 December 2013.
  2. 1 2 "National Records – Korea (KOR)". www.speedskatingresults.com. Retrieved 26 December 2013.
  3. http://news.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2010/02/18/2010021800086.html
  4. http://www.bulkyo21.com/news/articleView.html?idxno=9600
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2010-02-19.
  6. http://www.koreatimes.com/article/578068
  7. "Sang-Hwa Lee (KOR) sets world record in 500m". International Skating Union. 9 November 2013. Retrieved 14 November 2013.
  8. "Lee Sang-hwa breaks world record". ESPN. 9 November 2013. Retrieved 10 November 2013.
  9. "Antoinette de Jong (NED) sets sub-four-minute Junior 3000m record". International Skating Union. 15 November 2013. Retrieved 28 November 2013.
  10. "Dutch set new Men's Team Pursuit world record". International Skating Union. 16 November 2013. Retrieved 28 November 2013.
  11. James O'Brien (2014-02-11). "Heather Richardson falls short of medal, Lee Sang-hwa wins 500m gold". NBC News.
  12. Yonhap News Agency (2014-02-11). "(Olympics) Speed skater Lee Sang-hwa poised for gold in women's 500 meters". GlobalPost.
  13. Soyoung Kim, Elaine Lies (2018-02-19). "Speed skating: South Korea, Japan celebrate skaters' bonhomie". Reuters.
  14. "Sang-Hwa Lee". www.speedskatingresults.com. Retrieved 26 December 2013.
  15. "Lee Sang-hwa". www.speedskatingstats.com. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  16. 1 2 3 "Evolution of the world record 500 meters Women". www.speedskatingstats.com. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
Records
Preceded by
Canada Shannon Rempel
Girls' sprint combination speed skating world record
23 January 2005 – 29 January 2012
Succeeded by
Czech Republic Karolína Erbanová
Preceded by
Japan Sayuri Yoshii
Girls' 500 m speed skating world record
18 November 2005 – 22 September 2017
Succeeded by
South Korea Kim Min-sun
Preceded by
China Yu Jing
Women's 500 m speed skating world record
20 January 2013 – present
Succeeded by
Current holder
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