Mathieu Turcotte
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's short track speed skating | ||
Representing Canada | ||
Olympic Games | ||
2002 Salt Lake City | 5000 m relay | |
2006 Turin | 5000 m relay | |
2002 Salt Lake City | 1000 m | |
World Championships | ||
1998 Bormio | Team | |
2000 The Hague | Team | |
2001 Nobeyama | Team | |
2003 Sofia | Team | |
2005 Chuncheon | Team | |
2005 Beijing | 5000 m relay | |
2006 Minneapolis | 5000 m relay | |
2001 Jeonju | 5000 m relay | |
2002 Montréal | 5000 m relay | |
2002 Milwaukee | Team | |
2003 Warsaw | 5000 m relay | |
2004 St. Petersburg | Team | |
2006 Montréal | Team |
Mathieu Turcotte (born February 8, 1977) is a Canadian former short track speed skater. He was born in Sherbrooke, Quebec.
Turcotte rose to fame within Canada upon winning the bronze in the men's 1000 m in the short track speed skating at the 2002 Winter Olympics, with a time of 1:30.563 (a race more remembered for the victory of Australian Steven Bradbury), and winning a gold as part of the men's 5000 m relay at the same games, with a team time of 6:51.579.
He placed 6th at the men's 1500 m short track speed skating at the 2006 Winter Olympics with a time of 2:24.558.
Mathieu is now the President of Apex Racing Skates, a company that makes custom short track speed skates.[1]
Career
References
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- 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)
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This biographical article on a speed skater in Canada is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
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