The men’s 500m is speed skating distilled to its most unforgiving form: one and a quarter laps of the oval, no pacing, no recovery window, no margin for technical compromise. On Saturday afternoon in Milan’s western suburbs, Jordan Stolz mastered the sport’s fastest and most unpredictable race and pushed his Olympic campaign toward historic territory.
The 21-year-old American won the 500m in an Olympic-record 33.77 seconds, securing his second gold medal of the Milano Cortina Olympics and adding pace behind what is rapidly becoming one of the defining individual campaigns of these Winter Games.
It also means Stolz has opened these Games with two races, two gold medals and two Olympic records.
Quick Guide
Jordan Stolz’s expected Olympic program
Show
Schedule
All times Eastern.
Wed 11 Feb Men’s 1000m, 12.30pm
Sat 14 Feb Men’s 500m, 11am
Thu Feb 19 Men’s 1500m, 10.30am
Sat 21 Feb Men’s Mass Start semi-finals, 3pm
Sat 21 Feb Men’s Mass Start final, 4.40pm
In a final that rewrote the record book, the entire podium finished below the previous Olympic record of 34.32sec. Stolz led the way in 33.77sec, followed by the Netherlands’ Jenning de Boo in 33.88sec and Canada’s Laurent Dubreuil in 34.26sec. The performance was historic on multiple levels. Stolz’s time stands as the fastest 500m ever skated at sea level, while his 0.11-second winning margin marked the largest gap in a single-race Olympic 500m since 1988.
Stolz did not win through a single dominant phase. Instead, he combined an elite start, near-perfect first-corner mechanics and exceptional speed preservation down the back straight – the three components that typically separate Olympic champions from podium contenders at this distance. In modern sprint skating, where aerodynamic drag and ice friction punish even slight inefficiencies, that phase-to-phase balance is rare.
The result mattered not just because it added another medal, but because of the distance itself. The 500m was generally viewed as the toughest of Stolz’s three primary individual races: an all-out sprint from the opening push, where races are often decided by hundredths and where even generational skaters can lose control before the first corner exit.
Skating in the third-to-last of 15 heats, Stolz was paired with De Boo – who ended Stolz’s two-year world title reign at the distance last March in Hamar, Norway – in one of the afternoon’s marquee matchups. If the 1000m on Wednesday showcased Stolz’s devastating closing speed, the 500m demanded something else: immediate perfection. Stolz delivered it.
“It was super close. I already knew it was going to be close before the race,” Stolz said. “I thought if I skated a perfect one, and I get a really good last outer turn, I can probably pull it off.”
He exploded cleanly from the start, protected the first turn with his trademark low, efficient body position and carried speed through the back straight with the kind of technical stability that has defined his rise.
“Coming down the last hundred meters, I thought I should be able to beat him and that’s exactly what I did,” he said. “I had a really good outer turn and I could feel him coming up. When I first entered the turn I was waiting to hear his skates, and I wasn’t hearing them yet. Then, finally, he started coming up next to me and I thought: ‘I can beat him now.’”
The victory builds directly on the platform he established earlier this week, when he won gold in the 1000m by the largest Olympic margin at the distance since 1984 – a result that immediately positioned him as the central long-track storyline of these Games.
Stolz said the emotional shift from winning earlier in the week helped him approach Saturday differently. “Way less pressure,” he said. “I really wanted to win the 1000m and after that I knew the environment, what to expect.
“Today I felt way less pressure until maybe 30 minutes before the race. Then I started to really focus. I was just thinking about the pushes, went through the whole race in my mind and how I wanted to do it. I’m happy I pulled it off.”
Two races into the program, the greater historical framing is harder to ignore. The men’s record for most speed skating gold medals at a single Olympics is the five won by Eric Heiden at Lake Placid in 1980, one of the most untouchable achievements in Olympic sport. Stolz entered Milan viewed as a multi-event gold threat. With two wins already secured, the ceiling remains intact. He also joins Heiden, who was in attendance Saturday, as only the second man to complete the Olympic 500m-1000m double.
His trajectory since Beijing 2022 has been meteoric. At 17 as an Olympic debutant, he finished 13th in the 500m and 14th in the 1000m. Four years later, he is dictating the competitive tone of the Olympic long-track program.
Raised in Kewaskum, Wisconsin, and developed at the Pettit National Ice Center in Milwaukee, Stolz has approached speed skating less as an art than a systems problem, obsessing over blade setup, ice density and aerodynamic efficiency in pursuit of what he calls “free speed”. The Milan track – a temporary Olympic venue that has already produced some of the fastest times in Olympic history – has played into that mindset.
The Olympic schedule now turns toward Thursday’s 1500m, where Stolz could become only the second American to win three gold medals at a single Winter Olympics. The mass start still follows later in the program. The last man to win three speed skating gold medals at a single Winter Games was Norway’s Johann Olav Koss in 1994, another historical marker now sitting within touching distance.
But if the 500m represented the event most likely to destabilize his campaign, Stolz just removed that threat. And with two gold medals already secured – and records falling around him – the possibility of a historic Olympic medal haul is unfolding in real time.
