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Shani Davis wins gold in men's 1,000 speedskating

Wed Feb 17, 2010 8:47 PM EST
sports, olympics, men, 1000, spd, shani-davis
Paul Newberry, AP National Writer
< PreviousNext >
showing 1 of 6 photos
<p>Gold medallist USA's Shani Davis reacts after the men's 1,000 meter speed skating race at the Richmond Olympic Oval at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia, Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2010.  (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)</p>

Gold medallist USA's Shani Davis reacts after the men's 1,000 meter speed skating race at the Richmond Olympic Oval at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia, Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2010. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

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— The color of the medal mattered, not the color of his skin.

All Shani Davis was thinking about was gold.

With a furious kick on the final lap Wednesday, Davis stuck his skate across the line and won his second straight Olympic title in 1,000-meter speedskating, the first skater to win this event twice at the Winter Games.

"That race depleted me 100 percent," he said. "I never want to leave anything on the track."

No worries there.

The Americans broke their medal drought at the Richmond Olympic Oval with a flourish, claiming two spots on the podium. Chad Hedrick, who won three medals at the 2006 games, took a surprising bronze after struggling to regain his motivation in the wake of Italy.

"I had to dig down deep and find my passion for speedskating again," the Texan said.

Davis dug deep on his final lap, knowing he needed a little more speed to catch South Korea's Mo Tae-bum. The American world-record holder swung both arms twice before leaning into the final turn, giving him just enough of a boost for a time of 1 minute, 8.94 seconds.

Mo, who won gold in the 500 two days ago, settled for silver this time, 18-hundreths behind Davis. Hedrick was next in 1:09.32.

"Those last 200, 300 meters were very difficult," said Davis, who usually leaves his left arm on his back until the last straightaway. "I was just trying to carry my speed. I could feel it leaving me. It doesn't matter what it looks like, just as long as you get across the line as quick as you could."

When he won this race four years ago, Davis became the first African-American athlete to win an individual gold at the Winter Games. This time, he simply wanted to be known for his skating.

"When you're a world champion or an Olympic champion, you get this little thing on your back called a target," Davis said. "To go out there and win the 1,000 meters twice is truly amazing."

Davis pumped his fist in the air and slapped hands with the U.S. coaches on the backstretch. Then, as he coasted around near the finish line, Hedrick skated over to shake his hand firmly and pat him on the back several times.

Their accomplishments in 2006 — Davis won a gold and silver; Hedrick a medal of each color — were overshadowed by a nasty feud stemming from the team pursuit. Davis wanted to stick with his individual events, a decision that peeved Hedrick, who believed it cost the Americans a shot at a medal.

Their animosity boiled over at a news conference after the 1,500, in which Davis finished second and Hedrick third. Hedrick brought up the team pursuit, and Davis stormed out of the room complaining that Hedrick didn't congratulate him on his gold, only the silver.

No hard feelings this time.

"All that stuff that was done before, man, that is old news," Hedrick said. "I just hope people will look at us in a different light and think, man, those guys are good athletes, rather than wondering who wants to fight with who."

The two stood together on the victory stand, each holding one end of an American flag.

"Him and I getting together and carrying the American flag, I think that shows that, you know what, people misread us," Hedrick said. "We just want to win."

For Davis, these games have been so much more enjoyable than his last two Olympics. In 2002, he was accused of benefiting from a fixed race to get on the short track team as an alternate and in Turin, the dispute with Hedrick certainly rubbed him the wrong way.

"It is my moment. It is my party," Davis said. "I can celebrate. I can dance. I can do whatever I want. I earned it."

Mo held up two fingers, representing both his finish and his total haul from these games. South Korea extended its impressive showing with two golds and two silvers in the first five events.

"I could have done better," Mo said through a translator. "Shani had the greater technique in turning the corners."

Skating in the same pair with Mo, Hedrick nearly clipped a lane marker in the first turn and appeared to lose valuable time, but he's always been a strong finisher. Amazingly, he nearly caught the fading Korean at the line.

That turned out to be good enough for bronze, giving Hedrick medals in four different Olympic events, a range that surely makes the former inline champion one of the most versatile skaters in U.S. history.

Davis is carving out quite a legacy for himself, too.

He became just the third American male to win more than one speedskating gold medal, joining Eric Heiden (five at the 1980 Lake Placid Games) and Irving Jaffee (two golds at the '32 Games, also in Lake Placid).

Lee Kyou-hyuk, a 31-year-old from South Korea skating in his fifth Olympics, hasn't been able to win a medal of any color. He again failed to make the podium, finishing ninth in 1:09.92.

The Americans put all four skaters in the top 10 after being shut out of the medals through the first four events. Nick Pearson was seventh in 1:09.79, while Trevor Marsicano took 10th in 1:10.11.

Maybe the U.S. team benefited from the Colbert bump.

Stephen Colbert, who stepped in to sponsor the team with fan donations after the American program lost their main benefactor, made his first appearance at the oval in suburban Vancouver. The faux talk-show host met with several skaters before the event, wearing a red coat with "Assistant Sports Psychologist" emblazoned on the back.

Then he watched the U.S. claim its first two medals on the long track.

Next up for the men is Saturday's 1,500, a race in which Davis holds the world record but could get a strong challenge from Hedrick, the only skater to beat him at that distance during the World Cup season.

"With me not having as good of a start, I have to pretty much focus on the 1,500," Hedrick said. "This is a great sign for me, only losing by four-tenths in the 1,000 and knowing that Saturday is a longer race."

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Paul Newberry's Column, All of Newsvine
  • Groups: BlackFolks, race and ethnicity, Race in America
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  • Public Discussion (19)
Mr.ChollyHudnallDeleted
The Grim Creeper

All that mattered this time was the color of the medal, not the color of his skin.

Can I ask why this line is necessary? Can't we just be proud of the athletic achievement.

  • 5 votes
Reply#2 - Wed Feb 17, 2010 11:46 PM EST
eric fuller

Some people just can't get over that a person of color competes in a sport that's usually considered a white persons sport (swimming, figure skating, bobsled, tennis, ice hockey, gymnastics etc.). Congratulations Shani. You're soul on ice.

  • 2 votes
#2.1 - Fri Feb 19, 2010 12:46 PM EST
Reply
kappa_man_stew

maybe this time the media will give the brother some love

  • 2 votes
Reply#3 - Wed Feb 17, 2010 11:58 PM EST
SameSoulSistaAgain81

Congrats Shani!

The color of the medal mattered, not the color of his skin.

Why did the article have to start out with that? And of course his skin color doesnt matter right now but let even a hit of scnadal off the ice come to light and we will just how fast he is back to being Black or African American.....

  • 1 vote
Reply#4 - Thu Feb 18, 2010 9:06 AM EST
Harry Ball

"Why did the article have to start out with that?"

The race baiting is getting old ain't it. The media loves some drama though. Did anyone see the black german figure skater? I didn't think they had black folks in germany. And I especially didn't think that they let them skate with white women. Some of our soldiers must be sowing some seeds over there.

    #4.1 - Thu Feb 18, 2010 10:25 AM EST
    SameSoulSistaAgain81

    Ok its obvious that I was having a bit of spelling trouble this morning so here's the reprint:

    And of course his skin color doesnt matter right now but let even a hint of scandal off the ice come to light and we will just how fast he is back to being Black or African American.....

      #4.2 - Thu Feb 18, 2010 10:57 AM EST
      SameSoulSistaAgain81

      Harry, I havent really watched any of the winter Olympics but I am not surprised, we are everywhere...lol

      • 1 vote
      #4.3 - Thu Feb 18, 2010 10:58 AM EST
      Yogi the Bro.

      I didn't think they had black folks in germany.

      The people who actually sang on the Milli Vanilli (spelling) album were from germany and black. (don't ask me how I know this). There are a lot of black folk in Europe. They're just "invisible".

      But regarding the headline, are we still surprised when a black person excels in a sport???

      • 1 vote
      #4.4 - Thu Feb 18, 2010 11:28 AM EST
      Harry Ball

      "But regarding the headline, are we still surprised when a black person excels in a sport???"

      On ice? Hell yea. I don't even like going down the frozen food section in the grocery store, lol. If I can't play it in shorts, I don't want no parts of it.

      • 2 votes
      #4.5 - Thu Feb 18, 2010 11:33 AM EST
      SameSoulSistaAgain81

      Ditto what Harry said.....

        #4.6 - Thu Feb 18, 2010 11:37 AM EST
        Mr.ChollyHudnallDeleted
        Harry Ball

        I was born in Germany so I know there are black folks residing there. I just thought they were all on military bases like I was. Not actual citizens that could represent Germany in the olympics.

        • 1 vote
        #4.8 - Thu Feb 18, 2010 2:28 PM EST
        Reply
        Aunk (The Cultural Health Guy)

        Hetep and Respect, it is good to see good news about America again.

        @Harry Ball #4.1

        Did anyone see the black german figure skater?

        No I didn't. However, African Americans, European Americans African Germans, European Germans and everyone getting along and doing there job. Sounds like a Culturally Healthy Olympic event to me.

        Cultural Literacy Minute: Black is in caps when you talk about a people, and lower case, when you simply talk about a color, as in black crayon.

        • 1 vote
        Reply#5 - Thu Feb 18, 2010 3:15 PM EST
        SameSoulSistaAgain81

        Different take on the same story...

        But doing something more -- meeting whatever the contrived accepted behavior is for an American Olympian -- was an apparent prerequisite for Davis in order to be embraced by his country like other gold medal-winning Americans. He had to genuflect. He had to be thankful not for his own talent and ambition but for being given an opportunity from someone else.

        Davis had to be, as Muhammad Ali infamously argued against once, what others wanted him to be.

        What a shame.

        http://olympics.fanhouse.com/2010/02/18/shani-davis-personifies-american-ideal/?icid=main|main|dl6|link7|http%3A%2F%2Folympics.fanhouse.com%2F2010%2F02%2F18%2Fshani-davis-personifies-american-ideal%2F

        • 1 vote
        Reply#6 - Thu Feb 18, 2010 4:59 PM EST
        RetiredAFNCO

        Cultural Literacy Minute: Black is in caps when you talk about a people, and lower case, when you simply talk about a color, as in black crayon.

        Nope, try again.

        I personally enjoy the Winter Olympics SO much more than the Summer ones, but that's just me.

          Reply#7 - Thu Feb 18, 2010 9:18 PM EST
          blackmilitant9

          Can't we just be proud of the athletic achievement

          Of course, but it isn't Blacks who habitually make an issue of color.

          • 2 votes
          Reply#8 - Thu Feb 18, 2010 11:31 PM EST
          RetiredAFNCO

          After reading most of these comments, you could have fooled me.

            #8.1 - Fri Feb 19, 2010 4:47 PM EST
            Reply
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