The American speedskating phenom finished fourth by nine hundredths of a second and history will have to wait
Nine hundredths of a second. That’s the margin between Jordan Stolz and an Olympic bronze medal. That’s also the margin between a remarkable Games and one of the most historically significant individual performances in Winter Olympics speedskating history.
The 21-year-old American phenom came up empty in Saturday’s mass start at Milan’s 400-meter oval, finishing fourth in the most unpredictable race his sport produces. Jorrit Bergsma of the Netherlands claimed gold with a winning time of 7:55.50, while Viktor Hald Thorup of Denmark took silver. Italy’s Andrea Giovannini edged Stolz at the finish line by that razor-thin nine-hundredths margin to claim bronze, leaving the American with nothing but a devastating near-miss on the final day of his Olympic program.
What history was on the line
The stakes heading into Saturday’s mass start were significant. Stolz had already captured gold in both the 500 and 1,000 meters before settling for silver in the 1,500 an extraordinary haul by any standard. A mass start victory would have made him the first man in 32 years to leave a single Olympics with three long-track speedskating gold medals, a feat last accomplished by Norway’s Johann Olav Koss in 1994. That kind of historical company doesn’t come around often, and Saturday was the window.
It didn’t close gently.
How the race unfolded
The mass start lived up to every bit of its chaotic reputation. Bergsma and Thorup made their decisive move early, breaking away from the pack in the opening laps and building an advantage of more than 20 seconds a cushion that proved insurmountable. Stolz and the rest of the field stayed together, conserving energy and waiting for the moment to strike, but the move came too late. With fewer than three laps remaining, the pack surged, but Bergsma crossed the line nearly five seconds clear of Thorup and nearly nine seconds ahead of Stolz.
The final sprint for bronze between Stolz and Giovannini was decided in the kind of photo-finish increment that requires technology to adjudicate. The Italian got there first, and Stolz was left in fourth the cruelest finishing position in Olympic competition.
Why the mass start is different from everything else Stolz does
Stolz built his reputation as one of the world’s most dangerous speedskaters in the traditional long-track format, where athletes race against the clock in isolated lanes without direct physical contact. The mass start is the sport’s outlier a sixteen-skater, shoulder-to-shoulder battle over 16 laps that borrows its strategic DNA from cycling. Athletes draft off each other early to conserve energy, manage position through inevitable contact and jostling, and then attempt to time a finishing sprint perfectly enough to compete for a medal.
Earlier in the week, Stolz had acknowledged the physical unpredictability of the event, expressing his awareness of the collision risk and the need to protect himself through the pack. He navigated the contact well enough it was the timing of the collective chase that ultimately cost him and the group any realistic shot at the leaders.
The journey that brought him here
What Saturday’s result can’t diminish is the arc of the story itself. Stolz traces his origin back to watching the magnetic Apolo Anton Ohno compete at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics an experience that ignited something in a kid who learned to skate on a backyard pond at age five. From those early days on frozen grass in Wisconsin, he progressed to winning his first U.S. national title at 16 before rapidly establishing himself among the world’s elite.
Leaving Milan with two golds and a silver with three medals total at just 21 years old is not a consolation prize. It’s a generational performance. The mass start result stings now and probably will for a while, but the broader picture is of a young athlete who showed up to the biggest stage in his sport and nearly rewrote the record books.
History had a 32-year-old lock on it Saturday. Stolz came nine hundredths of a second from picking it. The 2030 Winter Games in the French Alps are already on the horizon.

