Truro News

Hamelin says world short-track championsh­ips won’t be his last

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The world short-track speed skating championsh­ips will be the last hurrah for the old guard of the Canadian team, with one exception — 33-year-old Charles Hamelin.

Hamelin, the star of Canada’s team for more than a decade with five medals from four Winter Olympics, made the surprise announceme­nt that he has decided to put off retirement for at least one more year.

The Ste- Julie, Que., skater said he has never felt stronger on skates going into the world championsh­ips this weekend on the team’s home ice at the Maurice Richard Arena and sees no reason to stop.

“I don’t want to have any regrets in my mind or my heart about the sport,” said Hamelin. “If I was to quit after these world championsh­ips I would have had regrets.”

He admits it made a difference that he and women’s team star Marianne St-gelais recently broke up after 10 years as a couple, a match made famous by their long track-side kiss after Hamelin won gold at the 2010 Games in Vancouver.

“It would be really difficult for me to say no but it was already in my mind before everything ...” said Hamelin, not wanting to go into details of the split. “For me, it’s just straightfo­rward in my mind.

“I still have the fire of shorttrack speedskati­ng in my mind and in my heart so I just want to continue what I love the most and see what I can do.”

He said he will skate one more season and then decide whether to continue.

St-gelais and Hamelin’s brother, Francois, are to retire after the worlds, while Valerie Maltais of Saguenay, Que., is moving into long-track skating.

The competitio­n comes only three weeks after the 2018 Winter Games in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, where Canada won one gold, a silver and three bronze medals in short track.

Pyeongchan­g saw a changeover of generation­s for Canada, with Hamelin and St-gelais shut out of the medals in the individual events, while 21-year-old Samuel Girard picked up a gold and a bronze medal and 23-yearold Kim Boutin won a silver and two bronzes. Hamelin settled for bronze in the men’s relay.

While Girard is now top dog on the men’s team, he’s delighted that Hamelin will be back.

“He’s a friend of mine and I really love to train with him,” said Girard. “We always want to be the best in training so we challenge each other.

“Pyeongchan­g confirmed a lot of things, but it’s short-track. Each year can be pretty up and down. Injuries and all that stuff can change a lot. But yeah, I want to stay on top and having Charles with me will help me a lot.”

St-gelais, 28, has been at her best in recent seasons, finishing second overall at the last two world championsh­ips, but said she is not up for another fouryear Olympic cycle.

“Those girls are so strong, they’re coming after me and I don’t feel I’ll have the same energy I had, the same passion,” said StGelais, a double silver medallist at the Vancouver Olympics.

“I feel great. For sure it’s a bit emotional doing my last laps here in Montreal, in front of my crowd, my family. I know it’ll be emotional on Sunday night for sure, saying goodbye to my sport and everything, but I’m happy to do it here. I feel that no matter what, people are going to be there for me.”

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