Personal information | |
---|---|
Birth name | Igor Alekseyevich Malkov |
Nationality | Russian |
Born |
Pervouralsk, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union |
9 February 1965
Height | 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in) |
Weight | 82 kg (181 lb) |
Sport | |
Country | Soviet Union |
Sport | Speed skating |
Turned pro | 1982 |
Retired | 1988 |
Achievements and titles | |
Personal best(s) | 500 m: 39.28 (1983) 1000 m: 1:16.99 (1983) 1500 m: 1:54.35 (1983) 3000 m: 4:06.54 (1984) 5000 m: 6:52.69 (1984) 10 000 m: 13:54.81 (1984) |
Medal record
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Igor Alekseyevich Malkov (Russian: Игорь Алексеевич Малков) (born 9 February 1965 in Pervouralsk, Russian SFSR) is a former speedskater.
Igor Malkov trained at VSS Trud in Sverdlovsk. Skating for the USSR, he became Olympic 10,000 m Champion at the 1984 Olympic Games in Sarajevo, only 0.05 seconds ahead of Tomas Gustafson, becoming the youngest male Olympic champion in the history of Olympic speed skating at an age of 19 years and 9 days. (The youngest female Olympic speedskater winner is American Anne Henning, who won the 500 m in 1972 at the age of 16.)
Earlier at those Olympics, he had lost the 5,000 m race by only 0.02 seconds to Gustafson. Before that, during the same winter, Malkov had sent shock waves into the speed skating world when he skated 13:54.81 on the 10,000 m, thus becoming the first to break the 14 minutes barrier (and almost 30 seconds ahead of the time set by then-current world record holder Gustafson) during the Christmas races at Medeo in December 1983. However, this time was never recognised as a world record by the International Skating Union. He set a new, official, world record later the same season, when he finished in a time of 14:21.51 at Medeo in March 1984, almost 30 seconds behind his personal best. His official world record would last for almost two years (until broken by Geir Karlstad on 16 February 1986) and his internationally unrecognised record was unbroken for four years (until broken by, again, Geir Karlstad, on 4 December 1987). The following seasons were not so good for Malkov, and he quit top skating after the 1988 season, although he made one more appearance at the Soviet Allround Championships of 1990.
Malkov was awarded the Order of Friendship of Peoples in 1984.