South Korea will host the final qualification event for short track speed skating at the 2018 Winter Olympics this week.
The fourth and final leg of the International Skating Union World Cup Short Track Speed Skating will come to Seoul’s Mokdong Ice Rink. The competition begins with heats on Thursday and Friday, and the finals will take place over Saturday and Sunday.
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Choi Min-jeong (front) of South Korea competes in the women`s 3,000-meter relay at the International Skating Union World Cup Short Track Speed Skating in Shanghai on Sunday. (AFP-Yonhap) |
This is the final qualifying event for the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympics. A total of 110 Olympic spots, 55 each for men and women, are up for grabs, and quota places will be determined based on countries’ results at World Cup races. Three best results out of four World Cups in each event will be considered for Olympic qualification.
At World Cups, individual skaters and relay teams each earn 10,000 points for gold, 8,000 for silver, 6,400 for bronze and so forth. In the 500 meters and 1,000 for both men and women, 32 quota spots are up for grabs. In the 1,500 for both genders, the maximum is 36. And eight teams apiece will compete in the men’s 5,000 relay and women’s 3,000 relay.
Regardless of its World Cup performances, South Korea, as the Olympic host, will automatically enter five men and five women in all races at PyeongChang 2018 but will be limited to one skater in each race in that case.
South Korea, long a dominant force in short track, will look to secure maximum quota places across the board on merit. In individual races, each country can have up to three skaters.
Through three World Cups, South Korea has been its usual strong self.
Two-time world overall champion Choi Min-jeong has been the top female skater for South Korea, with six golds and one silver.
Choi is the leader in the 1,500, followed by teammate Shim Suk-hee. Choi won the 1,500 races at the first two World Cups and finished second to Shim in the third stop in Shanghai last weekend. Shim has a third-place finish in addition to her lone title in the 1,500.
Shim is third overall in the 1,000 so far, with Kim Boutin of Canada leading the way after winning the gold in Shanghai.
In the 3,000 relay, South Korea leads all countries, thanks to two victories and one runner-up finish.
South Korean women have long struggled in the 500, the shortest race in short track, where stronger and more explosive skaters have thrived.
The story has been the same this season. Choi won the opening 500 World Cup race in Budapest late September, with Shim coming in at third, but no South Korean has had a podium finish since then.
Arianna Fontana of Italy, who won a silver and a bronze in the 500 at the last two Winter Olympics, leads the 500 standings without a race victory. After Choi’s season-opening win, Marianne St.-Gelais and Boutin, both of Canada, have split the 500 titles.
On the men’s side, 18-year-old Hwang Dae-heon has emerged as an ace in an inexperienced group.
Hwang, the youngest member of the men’s national team at 18, leads all skaters in the 1,500 with two victories and one second-place finish. He’s also third in the 500 and 1,000 rankings.
Overall, Hwang has grabbed two gold, three silver and two bronze medals through three World Cups.
Hwang’s teammate Lim Hyo-jun has missed the past two World Cups with a back injury after winning both the 1,000 and 1,500 titles at the first World Cup.
South Korea has yet to win a men’s relay gold, and its best performance this World Cup season has been the silver medal behind the United States in Shanghai last weekend. (Yonhap)