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Sigvard Ericsson

Sigvard Ericsson
Sigge Ericsson 1956.jpg
Sigge Ericsson in 1956
Personal information
Birth name John Sigvard Ericsson
Nickname(s) Sigge
Nationality Swedish
Born (1930-07-17) 17 July 1930 (age 86)
Alanäset, Sweden
Sport
Country Sweden
Sport Speed skating
Club IF Castor, Östersund
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s) 500 m: 44.0 (1955)
1000 m: 1:31.0 (1958)
1500 m: 2:11.0 (1956)
3000 m: 4:45.3 (1956)
5000 m: 7:56.7 (1956)
10 000 m: 16:35.9 (1956)

John Sigvard "Sigge" Ericsson (born 17 July 1930) is a retired Swedish speed skater. He competed at the 1952 and 1956 Olympics and won a silver and a gold medal in 1956.

Ericsson started competing internationally in 1951 at the European Allround Championships where he did not qualify for the final distance. The next year, he participated again and he also participated in the 1952 Winter Olympics, but it would be a few more years until he won any international medals.

In 1953, the male Soviet skaters started competing internationally again for the first time since World War II and they took the world by storm. By 1954, most of the world records (for both men and women) were held by Soviet skaters – all those records having been skated on the fast ice of the Medeo rink in Alma-Ata. Among the best Soviet skaters of that time were Oleg Goncharenko and Boris Shilkov, who had taken one gold medal each and one silver medal each at the World Allround Championships of 1953 and 1954, making them the favourites at the 1954 European Allround Championships that followed. But while Shilkov became European Champion that year, Goncharenko finished 4th, having to allow silver medallist Hjalmar Andersen and bronze medallist Ericsson before him. This was Ericsson's first international medal.

The next year, Ericsson became the 1955 European Allround Champion, ahead of Shilkov (who took silver) and Dmitry Sakunenko (who won bronze). This made him the first to keep the Soviet skaters from taking gold at international competitions since they had re-entered the international skating world two years earlier. Two weeks later, Ericsson became World Allround Champion in Moscow, beating Goncharenko (silver) and Shilkov (bronze) on their "home ground".

Ericsson then participated in the 1956 Winter Olympics and he won silver on the 5000 m, behind world record holder Boris Shilkov, but ahead of bronze medallist Oleg Goncharenko. Two days later, Ericsson participated in the 10000 m – one of the very few distantances at the time in which the world record was not being held by a Soviet skater. Knut Johannesen skated a very fast 16:36.9 – only a little over four seconds slower than the world record held by Hjalmar Andersen – and it seemed that Johannesen's first international medal would be Olympic gold. But Ericsson managed to beat the time set by Johannesen by one second, setting a new Olympic record and becoming Olympic Champion on the 10000 m.


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