Mike Ireland

{{short description|Canadian speed skater}}

{{BLP one source|date=May 2014}}

{{Infobox sportsperson

| image = Mike Ireland (09-12-2007).jpg

| caption = Ireland in 2007

| full_name = Michael James Grant Ireland

| birth_date = {{Birth-date and age|3 January 1974}}

| birth_place = Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada

| headercolor = lightsteelblue

| medaltemplates =

{{Medal|Sport|Men's speed skating}}

{{Medal|Country|{{CAN}}}}

{{Medal|Competition|World Sprint Championships}}

{{Medal|Bronze|2004 Nagano|Sprint}}

{{Medal|Bronze|2002 Hamar|Sprint}}

{{Medal|Gold|2001 Inzell|Sprint}}

{{Medal|Silver|2000 Seoul|Sprint}}

{{Medal|Competition|World Single Distance Championships}}

{{Medal|Bronze|2004 Seoul|500 m}}

{{Medal|Silver|2000 Nagano|500 m}}

{{Medal|Bronze|2000 Nagano|1000 m}}

}}

Michael James Grant Ireland (born 3 January 1974 in Winnipeg, Manitoba) is a Canadian long track speed skater.{{cite Sports-Reference |title=Mike Ireland |url=https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/ir/mike-ireland-1.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200418051301/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/ir/mike-ireland-1.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=2020-04-18 |access-date=2020-01-28}}

Ireland specialises in the 500 m and the 1000 m sprint distances. He participated in the 500 m at the 1994 Winter Olympics (finishing 26th), the 500 m (6th) and 1000 m (14th) at the 2002 Winter Olympics and the 500 m (7th) at the 2006 Winter Olympics. Ireland was the 2001 World Sprint Champion, while winning several more medals at several World Championships (see the next section), and he also set a world record on the 1000 m (only to be broken 8 days later by compatriot Jeremy Wotherspoon).

In November 2008 Ireland suffered a severe injury in a World Cup event in Berlin.[http://www.oval.ucalgary.ca/releases/november9release] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110613203436/http://www.oval.ucalgary.ca/releases/november9release|date=June 13, 2011}} Later in the same meet teammate Wotherspoon broke his arm in seven places. In a span of two days Canada's two strongest sprinters were placed in serious jeopardy of not skating in the 2010 Olympics in their home country. Both skaters started the long road to recovery and in the 2010 Canadian Olympic trials both succeeded in their comebacks.

Ireland qualified in the 500 and is a member of the Canadian 2010 Olympic speed skating team. He skated the fastest time of the trials 34.46 and set a personal best.{{cite web |url=http://speedskatingresults.com/index.php?p=5&e=3720&gi=0&g=1 |title=SpeedskatingResults.com |publisher=SpeedskatingResults.com |date= |accessdate=2014-05-14}} Often skating in the shadow of his teammate Jeremy Wotherspoon, Ireland is the second most decorated Canadian in speed World Cup sprints.

Ireland was inducted into the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame in 2012.{{cite web |title=Michael Ireland |url=http://honouredmembers.sportmanitoba.ca/inductee.php?id=456&criteria_name=&criteria_sport=&criteria_keywords=&criteria_induction=2012&criteria_sort=name |website=Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame - Honoured members database |publisher=Sport Manitoba |access-date=10 November 2021}}

Medals

An overview of medals won by Ireland at important championships he participated in, listing the years in which he won each:

World records

Over the course of his career, Ireland skated one world record:

class="wikitable"
EventTimeDateVenue
1000 m1:08.343 March 2001align=left|{{flagicon|CAN}} Calgary
Source: SpeedSkatingStats.com

{{cite web |title=Mike Ireland |url=http://www.speedskatingstats.com/index.php?file=skater&code=1974010301 |publisher=SpeedSkatingStats.com |accessdate=29 August 2012}}

References

{{Reflist}}