Fast, faster, fastest! Short Track is all about speed and strategic thinking. Although the Korean and Chinese skaters often excel at the FISU World University Games, they are challenged by athletes from many other countries. A need for speed? Check out short track!
News
All newsEvents
FISU Technical Committee Chair
The History of Short Track Speed Skating in FISU
Short Track Speed Skating was first added to the sports programme of the Winter Universiade at the 12th edition in 1985 in Belluno, Italy. Ten men’s teams and nine women’s teams, with a total of 58 athletes, battled for the gold. In the men’s competition the Canadians grabbed the gold in both the team and individual events. On the women’s side, the Americans won the gold.
Today, the strongest teams come from Asia (China, Japan, Korea), the athletes from which regularly reach the podium places in almost all Short Track Speed Skating distances. FISU Games medalists are also well decorated at international events, such as Choi Min-jeong (KOR) who won four gold medals at the Lake Placid 2023 FISU Games and is a multiple Olympic and World Championship gold medalist. Short Track Speed Skating is a spectacular event which requires no special infrastructure as any ice hockey arena with dimensions corresponding to the international standards will be suitable. This discipline was recognised by the IOC as a full-fledged Olympic sport in 1992 and thanks to good cooperation with the International Skating Union (ISU) FISU closely follows the evolution of this sport to develop the competition programme. In 2023, Lake Placid hosted for the first time the Mixed Team Relay event.