MILAN — Jordan Stolz was rather surprised that his Olympic gold medal streak ended Thursday. So was his coach. And so, too, was Ning Zhongyan of China, the man who beat Stolz in speedskating's 1,500 meters at the Milan Cortina Games.
''I didn't have it today,'' said Stolz, a 21-year-old from Wisconsin. ''Not sure why.''
And Ning, who skated a Games-record time of 1 minute, 41.98 seconds in the 13th of 15 heats, said this is what ran through his mind while watching the favored Stolz set off in the day's final pairing: ''I was really happy with a silver medal.''
But Stolz couldn't take away the gold, which he was hoping to add to earlier victories in the 500 and 1,000 meters at the Milano Speed Skating Stadium, a temporary facility that has been producing swift times. Instead, Stolz was off the pace at the first checkpoint, trailed by 1.35 seconds with a lap to go and, even when he turned on his usual closing speed, ended up 0.77 back for the silver.
''I thought he would beat Ning by .5,'' Stolz's coach, Bob Corby, wrote in a text message to The Associated Press. ''I really don't know why he didn't perform well. It for sure wasn't mental. ... He didn't have his best race and Ning did!''
Stolz, for his part, couldn't quite believe it when he saw his time on a screen at the initial check point.
''The beginning part was a little bit off. ... I thought I was pushing a bit harder than that,'' Stolz said. ''I didn't quite feel it in the legs.''
His time, 1:42.75, was nearly a half-second quicker than the previous Olympic record, but it wasn't good enough on this day.