Steven Bradbury

For other people named Steven Bradbury, see Steven Bradbury (disambiguation).
Steven Bradbury
Personal information
Born (1973-10-14) 14 October 1973
Camden, New South Wales, Australia
Height 5 ft 10 in (178 cm)[1]
Weight 176 lb (80 kg)
Sport
Country  Australia
Sport Short track speed skating

Steven John Bradbury OAM (born 14 October 1973) is an Australian former short track speed skater and four-time Olympian. He is best known for winning the 1,000 m event at the 2002 Winter Olympics after all of his opponents were involved in a last corner pile-up. He was the first Australian to win a Winter Olympic gold medal and was also part of the short track relay team that won Australia's first Winter Olympic medal, a bronze in 1994.

1992 Winter Olympics

In 1991, Bradbury was part of the Australian quartet that won the 5,000 m relay at the World Championships in Sydney. It was the first time Australia had won a World Championship in a winter sport.[2]

Australia's short track relay team went into the 1992 Winter Olympics as world champions, but the team crashed in the semi-finals.[2][3] The Australians were in third place when Richard Nizielski lost his footing; they finished fourth and failed to reach the final.[2][4] Bradbury was unable to help, as he had been named as the reserve for the team and was sitting on the bench. He was not selected for any individual events.[5]

1994 Winter Olympics

At the 1994 Winter Olympics in Norway, Bradbury was part of the short track relay team that won Australia's first Winter Olympic medal, a bronze. They scraped into the four-team final after edging out Japan and New Zealand to finish second in their semi-final.[6] They adopted a plan of staying on their feet as first priority, and remaining undisqualified and beating at least one of the other three finalists.[2][7] During the race, the Canadians fell and lost significant time, meaning that Australia would win their first medal if they raced conservatively and avoided a crash. Late in the race, Nizielski was fighting with his American counterpart for track position for the silver medal, but took the safe option and yielded, mindful of the lost opportunity following the crash in Albertville.[2] Thus Bradbury, Nizielski, Andrew Murtha and Kieran Hansen became Australia's first Winter Olympics medallists.[2]

Bradbury was also entered in the 500 m and 1,000 m individual events and was the favourite going into the latter. In the first event, Bradbury came second in his heat in a time of 45.43 s and then won his quarterfinal in a time of 44.18 s to qualify for the semifinal. In the semifinal, Bradbury was knocked over by a rival and he limped home fourth, in a time of 1 m 03.51 s and was eliminated. He came fourth in the B final and was classified eighth overall out of 31 competitors.[8] In the 1,000 m event, Bradbury fell in his heat after being illegally pushed by a competitor who was later disqualified. He came home in 23 m 01.89 s, more than 30 s off the leaders' pace and was eliminated. Nevertheless, because of the high rate of accidents, Bradbury came 24th out of 31 competitors.[8][9]

During a 1994 World Cup event in Montreal, another skater's blade sliced through Bradbury's right thigh after a collision; it cut through to the other side and he lost four litres of blood.[9] Bradbury's heart rate had been up near 200 at the end of the race and this meant that blood was being pumped out at a fast pace. All four of his quadriceps muscles had been sliced through and Bradbury thought that if he lost consciousness, he would die. He needed 111 stitches and could not move on ice for three weeks. His leg needed 18 months before it was back to full strength.[10]

1998 Winter Olympics

Bradbury, Nizielski and Kieran Hansen, three of the quartet that won Australia's maiden medal in 1994, returned for the 1998 Winter Olympics in Japan with new teammate Richard Goerlitz. There were hopes that they could repeat their Lillehammer performance. However, in their qualifying race, they placed third in a time of 7 m 11.691 s and missed the final by one place, even though they had been two seconds faster than their medal-winning performance of 1994. They completed the course four seconds slower in the B final and came last in the race, and thus last out of eight teams overall.[11][12]

Bradbury was again regarded as a medal contender in the individual events, but was impeded in collisions with other racers in both the 500 m and 1,000 m events.[13] He came third in the heats of both races, posting times of 43.766 s and 1 m 33.108 s in each race. Neither of these times were fast enough to advance him to the quarterfinals and he came 19th and 21st out of 30 competitors respectively.[12]

In September 2000 Bradbury broke his neck in a training accident. Another skater fell in front of him and Bradbury tried to jump over him, but instead clipped him and tripped head first into the barriers. As a result, Bradbury fractured his C4 and C5 vertebra. He spent a month and a half in a halo brace, and needed four pins to be inserted in his skull and screws and plates bolted into his back and chest.[13] Doctors told Bradbury that he would not be able to take to the ice again, but he was determined to reach another Olympics. He wanted redemption after the crashes in the individual races in 1994 and 1998, even though he conceded that he would be past his best in terms of challenging for the medals.[13]

2002 Winter Olympics

Bradbury is best known for his memorable and unlikely gold medal win in the men's short track 1000 metres event at the Salt Lake City 2002 Winter Olympic Games, owing to three improbable events.

Bradbury won his heat convincingly in the 1,000 m, posting a time of 1:30.956. However, it appeared that his run would end when the draw for the quarter-finals was made: Bradbury was allocated to the same race as Apolo Anton Ohno, the favourite from the host nation, and Marc Gagnon of Canada, the defending world champion. Only the top two finishers from each race would proceed to the semifinals. Bradbury finished third in his race and thought himself to be eliminated, but Gagnon was disqualified for obstructing another racer, allowing the Australian to advance to the semi-finals.[14]

After consulting his national coach Ann Zhang, Bradbury's strategy from the semi-final onwards was to cruise behind his opponents and hope that they crashed, as he realised he was slower and could not match their raw pace.[15] His reasoning was that risk-taking by the favourites could cause a collision due to a racing incident, and if two or more skaters fell, the remaining three would all get medals, and that as he was slower than his opponents, trying to challenge them directly would only increase his own chances of falling.[15][16] Bradbury said that he was satisfied with his result, and felt that as the second-oldest competitor in the field, he was not able to match his opponents in four races on the same night.[17]

In his semi-final race, Bradbury was in last place, well off the pace of the medal favourites. However, three of the other competitors in the semi-finaldefending champion Kim Dong-sung of South Korea, multiple Olympic medallist Li Jiajun of China and Mathieu Turcotte of Canadacrashed, paving the way for the Australian to take first place and advancing him through to the final.

In the final, Bradbury was again well off the pace when all four of his competitors (Ohno, Ahn Hyun-Soo, Li and Turcotte) crashed out at the final corner while jostling for the gold medal. This allowed the Australian, who was around 15 m behind with only 50 m to go, to avoid the pile-up and take the victory.[15][16][18] Bradbury raised his arms aloft in complete disbelief and amazement at the unlikely circumstances of his victory. A shocked Bradbury became the first person from any southern hemisphere country to win a Winter Olympic event.[19] After a period of delay, the judges upheld the result and did not order a re-race, confirming Bradbury's victory.[20]

In an interview after winning his gold, referring to his two career- and life-threatening accidents,[21] Bradbury said "Obviously I wasn't the fastest skater. I don't think I'll take the medal as the minute-and-a-half of the race I actually won. I'll take it as the last decade of the hard slog I put in."

Bradbury was acutely aware of the possibility of collisions after his semi-final race. In an interview after the race he said:

I was the oldest bloke in the field and I knew that, skating four races back to back, I wasn't going to have any petrol left in the tank. So there was no point in getting there and mixing it up because I was going to be in last place anyway. So (I figured) I might as well stay out of the way and be in last place and hope that some people get tangled up.[22]

He later said that he never expected all of his opponents to fall, but added that he felt that the other four racers were under extreme pressure and might have over-attacked and taken too many risks. Bradbury cited the host nation pressure on Ohno, who was expected to win all four of his events. Li, much like Bradbury himself, had won Olympic medals but was yet to take a gold medal, Turcotte only had one individual event, and Ahn had been the form racer at the Olympics so far. Bradbury felt that none would be willing to settle for less than gold and that as a result, they might collide.[23]

Bradbury had three other events at the 2002 Winter Olympics. In the relay event, the Australians came third in their heat in a time of 7:19.177 and failed to make the final. They came second in the B final and finished sixth out of seven teams.[24] In the 1,500 m event, Bradbury came third in his heat, before placing fourth in the semi-final and being eliminated. He then came fifth in the B final to finish 10th out of 29 entrants. He was unable to maintain his speed through the competition; after posting a time of 2:22.632 in the heats, Bradbury slowed by three seconds in each of his next two races.[24] In the 500 m event, Bradbury came second in his heat and was eliminated after coming third in his quarter-final. He finished 14th out of 31 overall.[24]

Legacy

The unlikely win turned Bradbury into something of a folk hero, comparable to ski jumper Eddie "The Eagle" Edwards and the 1988 Jamaican bobsleigh team.[25] Many newspapers hailed Bradbury for his unlikely win and used it as an example of the value of an underdog never giving up, regardless of the odds against them.[18] The unusual manner of his victory made news across the world.[26] However, some unhappy American commentators also made fun of the race and used it to criticise what they perceived as a lack of merit required to win a short track event. The USA Today said "The first winter gold medal in the history of Australia fell out of the sky like a bagged goose. He looked like the tortoise behind four hares",[27] while the Boston Globe said that "multiple crashes that allow the wrong person to win are part of the deal".[27]

Bradbury's feat has entered the Australian colloquial vernacular in the phrase "pulling a Bradbury", or "Bradburied" (as a verb) meaning an unexpected or unusual success.[28]

Bradbury's triumph was celebrated by Australia Post issuing a 45-cent stamp of him, which followed on from their issuing stamps of Australian gold medallists at the 2000 Sydney Olympics. Bradbury's stamp was issued on 20 February 2002, four days after his victory.[26] He received $20,000 for the use of his image. He said the fee "should get me a car. I haven’t had a car for a long time",[29] and later described having a stamp issued as "a great honour".[9] Before the Olympics, Bradbury had needed to borrow $1,000 from his parents to fix his old car in order to go to training. Bradbury was courted for sponsorship after his triumph and was interviewed on many American television shows.[26] Bradbury had previously supported himself by making skating boots in a backyard workshop; his Revolutionary Boot Company supplied Ohno with free boots and Bradbury had asked Ohno to endorse his boots when he won in Salt Lake City, not thinking that he would defeat the American.[30]

Retirement

Bradbury retired after the 2002 Olympics. He commentated at the 2006 Winter Olympics,[31] and for Channel Nine and Foxtel at the 2010 Winter Olympics.[32] In 2005 Bradbury was a contestant in the second series of the Australian dancing show Dancing with the Stars.

Motor racing career

After retiring from skating, Bradbury participated in competitive motor racing. After placing fourth in the 2005 Australian Grand Prix Celebrity Race,[33] he competed in Queensland state-level Formula Vee championship events in 2006 and 2007, placing sixth in both years.[34] In 2007, he raced in the National Formula Vee Championships at Morgan Park Raceway placing 15th.

In 2009, Bradbury competed in the Australian Mini Challenge at the Tasmanian round and 2010 at Queensland Raceway as their Uber Star. He also made a one-off appearance in the V8 Ute Series at Adelaide in March 2010, driving with regular Ute racer Jason Gomersall on the support program of the 2010 Clipsal 500.

Honours

In 2007, Bradbury was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia for his Olympic gold medal win.[35] He was also inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame in that year.[36]

In 2009, Bradbury was inducted into the Queensland Sport Hall of Fame.[37]

References

  1. "Steven Bradbury". sports-reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved 20 January 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Gordon (1994), p. 426.
  3. Andrews, p. 3.
  4. McAvaney, p. 135.
  5. The Compendium, p. 219.
  6. Andrews, p. 251.
  7. Andrews, pp. 252253.
  8. 1 2 The Compendium, p. 221.
  9. 1 2 3 Smart and Bradbury
  10. Gordon, p. 290.
  11. Andrews, p. 314.
  12. 1 2 The Compendium, p. 224.
  13. 1 2 3 Gordon (2003), p. 291.
  14. Gordon (2003), pp. 287288.
  15. 1 2 3 Gordon (2003), pp. 287299.
  16. 1 2 "Australia win first ever gold". BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 17 February 2002. Retrieved 21 July 2009.
  17. Gordon (2003), p. 288.
  18. 1 2 "Australia salutes Bradbury". BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 18 February 2002. Retrieved 21 July 2009.
  19. Gordon (2003), p. 287.
  20. Gordon (2003), pp. 289290.
  21. Gordon (2003), pp. 290291.
  22. Gordon (2003), pp. 288289.
  23. 1 2 3 The Compendium, p. 226.
  24. "Last man standing wins gold". Daily Mail. Retrieved 21 February 2014
  25. 1 2 3 Gordon (2003), p. 286.
  26. 1 2 Gordon (2003), p. 289.
  27. http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/8.30/sportsf/stories/s1490956.htm
  28. "Gold medallists get framed stamps" Australian Olympic Committee 25 February 2002.
  29. Gordon (2003), p. 292.
  30. "Steven Bradbury Biography and Olympic Results". Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved 2012-02-26.
  31. Vickery, Colin (10 February 2010). "Alisa Camplin opens up about the physical and emotional toll of elite sport". news.com.au. News Limited. Retrieved 2012-02-26.
  32. http://www.natsoft.com.au/cgi-bin/results.cgi?06/03/2005.APGP.R14 Retrieved 2 March 2010
  33. http://www.fvee.org.au/points/qld/ Retrieved 2 March 2010
  34. "Steven John Bradbury, OAM". It's an Honour. Retrieved 7 September 2013.
  35. "Steven Bradbury OAM". Sport Australia Hall of Fame. Retrieved 7 September 2013.
  36. "Mr Steven Bradbury OAM". Queensland Sport Hall of Fame. qsport.org.au. Retrieved 20 January 2014.

Sources

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