Jordan Stolz pursues 1500m gold, sprint sweep as speed skating continues in Milan
They say good things come in threes.
It’s a common superstition: If two good things happen in rapid succession, a third is sure to follow. On Thursday, 21-year-old speed skater Jordan Stolz will look to prove that theory as he takes on the 1500m.
The sprint king has lived up to his title so far in Milan, racing to gold in Olympic record time in both the 1000m, his best distance, and the 500m, his weakest event. A win in the 1500m would make him the second-ever American athlete after Eric Heiden to collect three or more gold medals in any sport at a single Winter Games. Heiden, a fellow Wisconsinite, won gold in all five of his speed skating events at the 1980 Lake Placid Games.
All speed skating events are available to watch on mobile, tablet and connected TV devices via the Peacock, NBC and NBC Sports apps.
| Date/Time | Event | Stream |
|---|---|---|
| Thurs, 2/19 10:30a-12:05p |
Men’s 1500m 🏅 | Peacock, NBCOlympics.com |
A two-time world champion and the two-time reigning World Cup champion in the distance, Stolz has won eight of the last nine 1500m races on the World Cup level. His one loss — a 5th-place finish Feb. 28, 2025 — came while he battled a lengthy bout of pneumonia and strep throat. Those ailments continued into the 2025 World Championships that March, though he still managed silver.
Last season, at a World Cup event hosted by his home oval in Milwaukee, Stolz smashed his own sea-level world record in the distance. His margin of victory — 1.21 seconds over two-time defending Olympic champion Kjeld Nuis — was greater than the margin separating second place from seventh place.
Nuis stands as one of Stolz’s biggest roadblocks in the 1500m. The 36-year-old Dutch skater, who owns the world and Olympic records, ended the 2025-26 World Cup circuit with four podium finishes in five total races (2 silver, 2 bronze) and a 2nd-place global ranking behind Stolz. Thursday’s competition marks the final race of Nuis’ career.
Stolz’s personal best time of 1 minute, 40.48 seconds is just 0.31 seconds off Nuis’ world record (1:40.17).
The last American skater to win the event was Derek Parra in 2002. Shani Davis took silver in 2006 and 2010.
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