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Jordan Stolz leads World Allround Speed Skating Championships after day 1

Jordan Stolz is bidding to repeat as World Allround champion, one month after winning two Olympic gold medals.

SportsBy Jennifer ReevesMarch 7, 20262 min read

Last updated: March 18, 2026, 8:43 AM

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Jordan Stolz leads World Allround Speed Skating Championships after day 1

Jordan Stolz leads the World Allround Speed Skating Championships at the halfway point, looking to repeat as the winner of one of sport's most storied competitions.

Stolz, the Olympic 500m and 1000m gold medalist, tops the standings after skating the fastest 500m and 11th-fastest 5000m on Saturday in Heerenveen, Netherlands.

The skaters race a 1500m and a 10,000m on Sunday, after which the world allround champion is decided combining all four results.

Norway's Sander Eitrem, who is in second place, could challenge Stolz's lead on Sunday given he is better at longer distances. At the Olympics, Eitrem won the 5000m and placed ninth in the 1500m and seventh in the 10,000m. Stolz rarely skates distances longer than 1500m.

SPEED SKATING WORLDS: Full Results | Broadcast Schedule

The World Allround Championships have been held officially since 1893 and crown the world's best overall skater, mixing sprints and distance races.

Distance skaters have traditionally dominated allrounds, which makes the sprinter Stolz's success — including winning the title in 2024 — all the more noteworthy.

Stolz is already making history just by competing at allrounds after placing second to Dutch rival Jenning de Boo in the World Sprint Championships on Thursday and Friday (a 500m and 1000m each day).

Stolz is the second skater to start both biennial competitions in the same year since they were combined into one weekend starting in 2020. He would be the first to complete both competitions under the new format.

He would be the first man to finish on the podium in both in the same year since 1988 — American Eric Flaim won the allround and placed third in the sprint.

In the women's competition, Japan's Miho Takagi and Norway's Ragne Wiklund are tied for the lead after the first day.

Wiklund, looking to become the first Norwegian woman to win allrounds since 1938, has the edge on day two given the distances are longer than day one, and Takagi is better suited to the shorter events.

World Allrounds conclude Sunday, live on Peacock starting at 8:30 a.m. ET.

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Jennifer Reeves

Sports Reporter

Jennifer Reeves covers college sports, the Olympics, and athletic culture across the nation. She has reported from three Olympic Games and specializes in Title IX issues, women's sports, and the evolving landscape of collegiate athletics. She is a member of the Association for Women in Sports Media.

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