Is the world ready for the Ice Derby?
Ice Derby envisions skaters racing in cities worldwide as fans bet on whom will win.
It’s an ambitious attempt to keep speedskating in public eye more than once every four years.
Jack Mortell leaned in and his eyes widened at the scenario he dreamed up: Who would win if all the gold medalists in speedskating from the upcoming Winter Olympics faced off against one another?
“I think people would want to know, don’t you?” Mortell asked, grinning. “I think that kind of race would generate some interest.” Fans may find out. In May, Mortell and wellheeled investors plan to launch Ice Derby, an entertainment ice show centered on a professional speedskating tour and featuring figure skating and ice dancing. If successful in burgeoning cities such as Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Ice Derby could reach the U.S.
“It’s bigger than just ice racing,” said Mortell, 60, a retired Illinois firefighter who has been involved in the sport for years. “This is global.”
Speedskaters would compete on a 220-meter track, a middle ground for skaters from the sport’s two disciplines, short track and long track. Purses would be much larger than those in international competition now. And to draw interest and increase profits, spectators would be allowed to bet on the races’ outcomes, not unlike horse racing.
Originally formed in 2006, Ice Derby is the brainchild of Korean investor Do-joung Hyan, who five years later hired Mortell. Mortell is known in the sport as passionate and knowledgeable but also somewhat fiery and bullish. Yet his career — including time as a skater, Olympic coach, an interna- tional official and board director to U.S. Speedskating — developed connections he hopes now are bearing fruit.
Ice Derby is the most ambitious attempt to mainstream a sport most of the world watches for two weeks once every four years. Yet four-time Olympic medalist Shani Davis and others have competed in the Netherlands, where the Dutch treat speedskating like Americans do football.
“We will have a living, breathing sport,” Mortell said. “It’s a chance for these athletes to have professional careers.”
Economic development is a major element in the sport’s sales pitches and promotional brochures, and videos outline an arena for 9,400 fans and a sprawling theme park in South Korea.
Supporters point to Keirin racing, a form of Japanese cycling that started in the late 1940s and is now popular there. Races are run on loops and call for both speed and maneuvering.
There is to be a three-day show including speedskating — but no gambling — in Dubai in May. Ultimately, Mortell envisions an annual tour of three or four events, traveling across the globe in a grand prix style.
Foreign investors have pledged more than $500 million, according to copies of the promoters’ financial agreements. Mortell said he hopes for U.S. investors soon.
Ice Derby could fill a hole for many athletes who abandon their sport after the Olympics because they can’t make a living at it.
“I was always very jealous of the figure skaters who could do ice shows and basically make a decent living out of what they thoroughly loved and enjoyed” after they were done competing as amateurs, said Bonnie Blair, a five-time Olympic gold medalist speedskater who supports the project. “Once we were done with the Olympics, you were done.”
There remain at least two issues Ice Derby must overcome: gaining approval of wagering and the endorsement of the International Skating Union, which oversees the sport.
“I’d be really concerned about the betting component in something like that at this time,” said Mike Plant, president of U.S. Speedskating and former president of U.S. Cycling.
Olympic gold medalist Dan Jansen, now a speedskating commentator said, “That’s why I think it would be difficult to have cooperation” with the ISU.
TV remains a goal too, though speedskating is rarely televised. “You don’t need to capture everyone,” Mortell said.
For example, Hyan, Ice Derby’s founder, isn’t even a fan. “He’s a businessman,” Mortell said. “He wants to make money.”