MILWAUKEE — Four years after showing up late for the Beijing Olympics and missing one of his races because of a case of COVID-19, U.S. long track speedskater Casey Dawson is enjoying what he jokingly terms his ''villain arc,'' peaking at the right time ahead of the Milan Cortina Games.
Dawson secured a spot for next month in the men's 5,000 meters — an event he was forced to skip in 2022 while sick — by winning at that distance at the U.S. Olympic trials in 6 minutes, 12.857 seconds on Friday night.
''I actually got COVID two or three weeks before going to the competition. Tested positive for 50 straight tests,'' said Dawson, a 25-year-old from Park City, Utah. ''Couldn't go over to the Games. I missed the opening ceremonies. Missed the 5,000 meters. Showed up 12 hours before my 1,500 meters. So I kind of got a little screwed over from that point of view. But this time around, I'm just looking forward to getting there smoothly and just getting a little bit of redemption.''
And then, with a chuckle, Dawson added: ''It's kind of fun to have, like, my villain arc, I would call it. Just coming back and having some fun.''
Ethan Cepuran was about 6 1/2 seconds back Friday, finishing next in 6:19.335.
The last American man to medal in the 5,000 at an Olympics was Chad Hedrick at the 2006 Turin Games.
Dawson already had secured the lone U.S. place for Milan in the men's 10,000 — a race not being contested at these trials — and also will be part of the trio for men's team pursuit at the Olympics.
Dawson, Cepuran and Emery Lehman took the bronze in that event in Beijing four years ago, set the world record in 2024 and claimed gold in the team pursuit at the world championships in March.