Canada's Steven Dubois wins 2 silvers at Four Continents short-track championship in Montreal
Alyson Charles adds silver in women's 500, Courtney Sarault nabs bronze
Canada's Steven Dubois wants to learn how to win, and he's looking towards one of his biggest rivals for insight.
"He's been at that high level for a while now," Dubois said of Hwang, who is currently fourth in the overall world ranking. "His positioning is always great. He's in shape and he's fast. He knows how to win.
"That's the difference between us right now. I'm getting on podiums but I need to learn how to win the final. That's the next step."
Dubois came in second in the men's 1,500-metre in two minutes :21.475 seconds, behind Hwang in 2:21.140. The 22-year-old was first with three laps remaining before Hwang jumped ahead, taking advantage of a collision between the two other Korean skaters.
The Canadian claimed a second silver medal, this time in the 500, on the final event of the day.
Steven Dubois led the way for 🇨🇦 with two silver medals at the inaugural ISU Four Continents <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ShortTrackSkating?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#ShortTrackSkating</a> championship.<br><br>He skated to 🥈 in the men's 1,500m & 500m races. <br>Read more: <a href="https://t.co/K2j9ckKvY2">https://t.co/K2j9ckKvY2</a> <a href="https://t.co/KsUoS5ZsyI">pic.twitter.com/KsUoS5ZsyI</a>
—@CBCOlympics
Dubois was third for the entire race before passing Korea's Kim Dagyeom on the inside on the last lap, to the roaring delight of fans at Maurice Richard Arena, but he could not catch Hwang.
"It could have been better," said Dubois of his day. "Two gold medals would have been more fun, but that wasn't my expectation. I wanted to finish in the top three for each distance. So I'm really happy with two silvers."
Alyson Charles, Courtney Sarault also medal
Two other Canadians medalled — Montreal's Alyson Charles won silver in the women's 500 while Courtney Sarault of Moncton, N.B. claimed bronze.
In front of her hometown crowd, Charles nearly won gold but Korea's Choi Min Jeong overtook her on the final half-lap by going fourth to first. Choi crossed the finish line in 43.684. Charles was right behind, in 43.787.
The Montrealer said she could not fend off the pass.
"I knew it was coming," said the 21-year-old, who earned her first individual medal of the season. "The 500s go by so quickly. The goal is to keep the same pace throughout, knowing the others are coming.
"Could I have held my lane a little better? That's something I need to work on in the coming weeks, the last laps on a 500."
🇨🇦 Picks up two <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ShortTrackSkating?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#ShortTrackSkating</a> medals in the 500m <br>Alyson Charles 🥈<br>Courtney Lee Sarault 🥉<br><br>Read more: <a href="https://t.co/qLu52zJ6Wj">https://t.co/qLu52zJ6Wj</a> <a href="https://t.co/5EZSGtCFjr">pic.twitter.com/5EZSGtCFjr</a>
—@CBCOlympics
Sarault finished fourth but she was awarded the bronze medal after American Maame Biney was served an arm block penalty.
Charles and Sarault did their best to pick up the slack in the absence of Kim Boutin, who pulled out of the event as a precautionary measure due to tendinitis in her left knee. Boutin has won six individual gold medals in four World Cups this season.
WATCH | Kim Boutin talks injury, cheering on teammates at ISU Four Continents:
"I have to keep improving," said Sarault, who finished fifth in the 1,500 final. "This is a good competition for this because I can work on my mistakes and really look back at them and try to improve for Germany and Netherlands, the World Cups coming up soon.
"I wasn't at my 100 per cent today."
Hamelin falls short of podium
It was a less successful day for five-time Canadian Olympic medallist Charles Hamelin, who came close but failed to reach a podium. The veteran finished fourth in the 1,500 final. He was eliminated in the 500 semifinal.
"I made a small positioning mistake in the 1,500 near the end of the race, with five laps to go," explained Hamelin. "And I haven't raced a 500 since last year. I don't train for them. So it was pretty hard. I thought I did OK."
Camille De Serres-Rainville made her return to international competition after suffering an ankle injury late last season. The Montrealer finished last in the women's 1,500 final.
Korea dominated the first day of the event by winning six medals, including four gold.
The finals for the 1,000 and relay races will take place Sunday.
The Four Continents is a brand-new competition on the short-track calendar that features speed skaters from North America, South America and Asia. Athletes from Oceania withdrew from the tournament.
Live stream coverage will resume Sunday at 2 p.m. ET at CBCSports.ca.
Canada roster
- Danaé Blais, Chateauguay, Que.
- Courtney Sarault, Moncton, N.B.
- Alyson Charles, Montreal
- Claudia Gagnon, La Baie, Que.
- Camille de Serres-Rainville, Montreal
- Charles Hamelin, Sainte-Julie, Que.
- Steven Dubois, Lachenaie, Que.
- Cédrik Blais, Chateauguay, Que.
- Pascal Dion, Montreal
- William Dandjinou, Verdun, Que.