Clas Thunberg

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Medal record
Clas Thunberg
Clas Thunberg
Men’s Speed Skating
Competitor for Flag of Finland Finland
Olympic Games
Bronze 1924 Chamonix 500 m
Gold 1924 Chamonix 1,500 m
Gold 1924 Chamonix 5,000 m
Silver 1924 Chamonix 10,000 m
Gold 1924 Chamonix Allround
Gold 1928 St. Moritz 500 m
Gold 1928 St. Moritz 1,500 m

Arnold Clas Robert Thunberg (5 April 189328 April 1973) was a Finnish speed skater who won five Olympic gold medals. He was born in Helsingfors (now Helsinki) and died in Helsinki.

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[edit] Short biography

Clas Thunberg began with speed skating rather late, at the age of 18, having led a somewhat rowdy life as a compulsive smoker and drinker before he concentrated fully on his sport. However, from the age of 28 – when he turned up at his first European Allround Championships – and for the following ten years, he was by far the most-winning skater.

Thunberg's greatest strengths were the shortest distances, the 500 through 5,000 metres. He never won an international 10,000 metre event, although he did win a silver medal on the 10,000 metres at the 1924 Winter Olympics – beaten by three seconds by compatriot Julius Skutnabb. Thunberg won three gold medals at the 1924 Olympics – the allround event, the 1,500 metres and the 5,000 metres. He remains the only person to have won an Olympic gold medal in allround speed skating, as despite the status of allround as the premier skating event, at least up until the 1990s, the event was abolished in the Olympics from 1928 onwards.

Thunberg won five World Allround Championships titles from 1923 to 1931, and also four European Allround Championships titles. He also took two more gold medals at the 1928 Winter Olympics, to end with five, and these two medals made him the oldest Olympic Speed Skating Champion, at the age of 34. However, despite his amazing run, he was occasionally vulnerable on the long distances. If his 500 and 1,500 metre events did not go exactly according to plan, then he could be beaten – as shown in the 1927 season when the 22-year-old Bernt Evensen pipped him to both the World and European title. Evensen, however, could never string together the long run of victories that Thunberg ended up with.

Despite his amazing career record, Thunberg never reached the top of Adelskalender – a statistical invention which ranks skaters according to their personal bests and then converts them into allround performances, using a table. Oscar Mathisen's personal bests on the three longest distances were simply too good for Thunberg to match. However, Mathisen – who was born five years before Thunberg – turned professional during World War I, meaning that the two never met in an ISU-sanctioned event.

[edit] Medals

An overview of medals won by Thunberg at important championships he participated in, listing the years in which he won each:

Championships Gold medal Silver medal Bronze medal
Winter Olympics 1924 (1,500 m)
1924 (5,000 m)
1924 (Allround)
1928 (500 m)
1928 (1,500 m)
1924 (10,000 m) 1924 (500 m)
World Allround 1923
1925
1928
1929
1931
1927 1922
European Allround 1922
1928
1931
1932
1923
1924
1927
1929
Finnish Allround 1920
1922
1924
1927
1928
1921 1916

[edit] World records

Over the course of his career, Thunberg skated four world records:

Event Result Date Venue
500 m 42.8 19 January 1929 Davos
1,000 m 1:28.4 11 January 1930 Davos
500 m 42.6 13 January 1931 St. Moritz
3,000 m 5:19.2 8 January 1932 Davos

[edit] Personal records

To put these personal records in perspective, the WR column lists the official world records on the dates that Thunberg skated his personal records.

Event Result Date Venue WR
500 m 42.6 13 January 1931 St. Moritz 42.8
1,000 m 1:27.4 4 March 1931 Oslo 1:28.4
1,500 m 2:18.1 11 January 1930 Davos 2:17.4
3,000 m 5:00.6 21 February 1933 Davos 5:19.2
5,000 m 8:32.6 4 February 1928 Davos 8:26.5
10,000 m 17:34.8 5 February 1928 Davos 17:22.6

Note that Thunberg's personal record on the 3,000 m was not recognised as an official world record.

Thunberg has an Adelskalender score of 192.633 points. His highest ranking on the Adelskalender was a second place.

[edit] References