National Post

Speedskate­r drills down on new career

Retired St-jean continues on dental path

- DAN BARNES dbarnes@ postmedia. com Twitter. com/sportsdanb­arnes

When Alexandre StJean was a speedskati­ng dental student, his divergent goals and lifestyles blended into a workable amalgamati­on.

Studying while training and competing is difficult but doable if you want it enough and if logistical and moral support is offered by family, friends, coaches and instructor­s. Together, they all made it work for him for several years. To separate one world from the other then, as St- Jean did earlier this summer by retiring from skating to begin practising at a dental clinic in Sainte-foy, Que., is to extract a piece of himself. Like a wisdom tooth, perhaps.

“It wasn’t the easiest decision to make, you know. I’ve been skating since I was five years old and I really love it,” he said on Wednesday.

Now 27 and two years removed from competing at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, where he finished 11th in the 1,000 metres, he wanted one more chance at the podium before putting his athletic career on ice.

“My goal was to come back to the Olympics in 2022 and I don’t want to just compete, I want to really have a shot for a medal. It was realistic for me to believe I could do it because we were going to have a new rink in my hometown of Quebec City, so it was going to be way easier for us to train there. But because of COVID, the delivery date for the rink has been postponed for a year. We’re supposed to be able to train and race in it right now but we won’t have it for another year, at least,” he said of the Centre De Glace, which was delayed by constructi­on shutdowns during the pandemic and is now expected to open in September 2021.

“For me that was the gamechange­r. I knew that realistica­lly speaking it wasn’t possible to aim for an Olympic medal without a rink to train in. I think I could see the big picture. COVID, I hope it’s going to be gone in a year, but you don’t know.”

He wasn’t prepared to move to Calgary to train at the oval there, so he pulled the plug and notified Speed Skating Canada of his decision about a month ago. He leaves his sport with five long track World Cup medals; a silver in the 500 metres, as well as three gold and a silver in team sprint.

“The silver in the 500 metres in Inzell, Germany, that was my best performanc­e ever,” he said. “All the best skaters were there. But I think my biggest achievemen­t for me was going to the Olympics, for sure. Everyone wants to be at the Olympics, and everyone wants to be at their best at the Olympics.”

It was, he said, one of his goals. He is driven by them and believes that might be the biggest adjustment to life in a dental clinic.

“My athlete mindset is still there. I don’t know if it’s going to go away one day. I don’t think so. I like to compete. I like to be the best. I like to set big goals and want to achieve them ... the goals are going to be different and the way to reach these goals will be different, too. But the mindset is still there.”

He started at a clinic in June and didn’t like it much, but has grown comfortabl­e in another, and believes he could own it one day.

“I think the best move for me was to find a clinic with a good dentist with more experience than I have, who could coach me. I got a nice opportunit­y in Sainte- Foy. I’m replacing a dentist who got sick and can no longer work as a dentist. I am kind of taking his place. He was working with an associate, so she is the one who is mentoring me.”

A dentist will typically earn a more comfortabl­e living than an amateur athlete, but St- Jean isn’t sure he’ll feel much different as a medical profession­al.

“I don’t think I’m going to live a big lifestyle,” he said.

“I’m going to keep living the way I live, a lot of sports, outdoor activities, like hikes. Maybe add a bit more travelling.

“I don’t think I’m going to spend that much. It’s not my type of personalit­y.”

 ??  ?? Alexandre St-jean
Alexandre St-jean

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