BEIJING — Charles Hamelin's final Olympic race was one for the record books.Â
Hamelin, 37, capped off his Olympic career in golden fashion as he helped his teammates win the men's 5,000-metre short-track speedskating relay on Wednesday.Â
The medal -- his sixth -- makes him the most decorated Canadian male Winter Olympian of all time, and ties him with long-track speedskater Cindy Klassen as the only other Winter Olympian with a half-dozen podium finishes. He has three golds, one silver and one bronze from previous Olympics.
Hamelin and Canadian teammates Steven Dubois, Jordan Pierre-Gilles and Pascal Dion won the race in a time of six minutes 41.25 seconds.
СÀ¶ÊÓƵ Korea won silver in 6:41.69, while Italy claimed bronze in 6:43.431.
"I just think if you put the work in, anything is possible. Finishing on top of the podium with these guys, it is living your dream," said Hamelin.
The medal means Hamelin is now tied for most Olympic medals won by any Canadian man, with sprinter Andre De Grasse. He's the oldest man to win a short-track speedskating medal, and joins women's hockey players Caroline Ouellette, Jayna Hefford and Hayley Wickenheiser as the only Canadian Olympians with four gold medals.
Dubois, meanwhile, has now won three medals — one of every colour — at the Beijing Games. He had earlier won silver in the 1,500 and bronze in the 500.
The 24-year-old Dubois from Terrebonne, Que becomes the second Canadian Olympian to complete the medal set in Beijing. Long-track speedskater Isabelle Weidemann won a gold, silver and bronze on the Ice Ribbon oval.
"It means so much. We had such a crazy season, and we wanted to show so bad what we could do. I saw on the last two exchanges that there were some small gaps and thought, 'This is it,'" said Dubois.
Canada is heading home from the Olympics without a men’s hockey medal for the first time in 16 years.
Lucas Wallmark scored midway through the third period as Sweden defeated Canada 2-0 in the quarterfinals at the Beijing Games on Wednesday.
Lars Johanssen made 22 saves for the Swedes, who will meet the Russian Olympic Committee on Friday in the semifinals. Anton Lander added the clincher into an empty net.
Matt Tomkins made 24 stops for Canada.
Canada's unbeaten women's hockey team was scheduled to play for gold late Wednesday night against the defending champion Team USA.
Meanwhile, at the Ice Cube, Brad Gushue's rink secured a semifinal berth without hitting the ice for a match.
Canada was guaranteed a top-four finish when the men's round-robin session was completed. Losses by Switzerland and Russia cleared the qualification route for 5-3 Canada.
"It's a big stress relief to be honest," Gushue said.
Gushue was scheduled to close out his round-robin schedule Thursday against Great Britain in what will be a playoff warm-up for both teams.
"We haven't been our best, but we haven't quit," Gushue said. "We've fought and we've kept a good attitude."
In women's play, Canada's Jennifer Jones split her games Wednesday but still had a chance of making the playoffs. Â
She beat American Tabitha Peterson 7-6 in the morning but dropped an 11-9, extra-end decision to China's Yu Han in the evening.Â
Jones will take a 4-4 record into Thursday's round-robin finale against Denmark's Madeleine Dupont.Â
Canada was tied in fourth place with Great Britain's Eve Muirhead and СÀ¶ÊÓƵ Korea's EunJung Kim. The top four teams in the 10-team field will reach the semifinals.Â
In Zhangjiakou, the cross-country duo of Antoine Cyr of Gatineau, Que., and Graham Ritchie of Parry Sound, Ont., set a best-ever result for Canada in the men's classic team sprint in an Olympic Games.Â
The Canadians held their own for much of the six-leg race until the Norwegians, Russians and Finns pulled away. Canada crossed the finish line fifth, a little over 22 seconds behind the gold-medal winners from Norway.
Canada's last Olympic medal in cross-country skiing was in Turin in 2006.Â
In the women's four-person biathlon relay, the Canadians struggled to keep up en route to a 10th-place finish. Canada finished 4:30.4 behind the gold-medal-winning team from Sweden in the 24-kilometre race.Â
Canada's foursome was made up of Emma Lunder from Vernon, B.C.; Calgary's Megan Bankes; Emily Dickson of Burns Lake, B.C.; and Sarah Beaudry from Prince George, B.C.
Canada has not won a medal in biathlon since Myriam Bedard's two golds in 1994.
On the slopes, Max Moffatt of Caledon, Ont., placed ninth in men's freeski slopestyle with 70.40 points against some stiff competition.
Alexander Hall of the United States won gold with 90.01 in his first run. Hall called it the best slopestyle run of his career.
In his first run, the 23-year-old Moffatt ended a rail slide too early, leading to a score of 47.18. Then in the second run he was a little tighter in his technical elements for 65.31.
"Unfortunately, I felt like I had a little more gas in the tank to try and get a better run down," said Moffatt, who won silver in slopestyle at the X-Games in Aspen, Colo., last month.
"Just got caught up in the rails there, but that's slopestyle, that's the way it goes."
Meanwhile, a stumble for alpine skier Erik Read took him out of contention in the men's slalom.
Read, from Canmore, Alta, was making good time in his second run when a mistake saw him take a little spill halfway down the hill. He quickly got back up and finished the race 5.01 seconds behind gold-medal winner Clement Noel of France. Read placed 24th.
Calgary's Trevor Philp failed to complete his opening run and did not ski in the second run.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 16, 2022.
The Canadian Press