Jonathan Guilmette
Short track speed skater
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's short track speed skating | ||
Representing Canada | ||
Olympic Games | ||
2002 Salt Lake City | 5000m relay | |
2002 Salt Lake City | 500 m | |
2006 Turin | 5000m relay | |
World Championships | ||
2006 Minneapolis | 5000 m relay | |
2001 Jeonju | 500 m | |
2001 Jeonju | 5000 m relay | |
2002 Montréal | 1500 m | |
2002 Montréal | 5000 m relay | |
2003 Warsaw | 5000 m relay | |
2004 Gothenburg | 1500 m | |
2001 Jeonju | 3000 m | |
World Team Championships | ||
2000 The Hague | Team | |
2001 Nobeyama | Team | |
2003 Sofia | Team | |
1999 St. Louis | Team | |
2002 Milwaukee | Team | |
2004 St. Petersburg | Team | |
2006 Montréal | Team | |
World Junior Championships | ||
1995 Calgary | Overall | |
1995 Calgary | 1500 m | |
1995 Calgary | 1500 m S.F. |
Jonathan Guilmette (born August 18, 1978 in Montreal, Quebec) is a Canadian short track speed skater who won silver in the 5000m relay at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin. At the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake, he won Gold in the 5000m relay and silver in the 500m.
Jonathan Guilmette currently works at the Olympic Oval in Calgary, AB.
External links
- Jonathan Guilmette at Olympics at Sports-Reference.com (archived)
- Jonathan Guilmette on Real Champions
- Jonathan Guilmette at the International Skating Union
- v
- t
- e
- 1992: Kim Ki-hoon, Lee Joon-ho, Mo Ji-soo, Song Jae-kun (KOR)
- 1994: Maurizio Carnino, Orazio Fagone, Hugo Herrnhof, Mirko Vuillermin (ITA)
- 1998: Éric Bédard, Derrick Campbell, François Drolet, Marc Gagnon (CAN)
- 2002: Éric Bédard, Marc Gagnon, Jonathan Guilmette, François-Louis Tremblay, Mathieu Turcotte (CAN)
- 2006: Ahn Hyun-soo, Lee Ho-suk, Oh Se-jong, Seo Ho-jin, Song Suk-woo (KOR)
- 2010: Charles Hamelin, François Hamelin, Olivier Jean, François-Louis Tremblay, Guillaume Bastille (CAN)
- 2014: Viktor An, Semion Elistratov, Vladimir Grigorev, Ruslan Zakharov (RUS)
- 2018: Shaoang Liu, Shaolin Sándor Liu, Viktor Knoch, Csaba Burján (HUN)
- 2022: Charles Hamelin, Steven Dubois, Pascal Dion, Jordan Pierre-Gilles, Maxime Laoun (CAN)
This article about a Canadian Winter Olympic medallist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This biographical article on a speed skater in Canada is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e