(Reuters) – Dutch speed skater Ireen Wust, who became the first Olympian to win gold at five different editions of the Winter Games last month, called time on her career in front of a home crowd at a World Cup event in Heerenveen on Saturday.
The 35-year-old is the Netherlands’ most decorated Olympian and won 13 Olympic medals over a 16-year career, more than any other speed skater.
“Even before I skated, I already got the standing ovation,” Wust said after finishing fourth in the race. “Everybody was cheering for me, so that got me really emotional.
“It was not my best 1,500 metres, but I enjoyed every second of it. I enjoyed Beijing, but this (spectators) is what you miss, we missed it for two years. The sound, it was incredible.”
At the Beijing Winter Games, Wust retained her title in the 1,500 metres with an Olympic record time of 1:53.28, before going on to win a bronze with the Dutch team at the women’s team pursuit event.
Wust won 11 medals over four previous Games since her Olympic debut in Turin in 2006, where she won 3,000 metres gold at the age of 19.
The event also celebrated three-time Olympic champion Sven Kramer, who skated in his last Olympic 5,000 metres race in Beijing, an event he once dominated with three consecutive gold medals in 2010, 2014 and 2018.
“What I’ll miss most is preparing for the really important moments, when you know it has to happen, and there’s no excuse,” Kramer said. “That drive is nowhere else to be found in life. But I’m going to discover how things will be different.”
(Reporting by Aadi Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by William Mallard)