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The speed skating team will go out for the last medal at Mass Start tomorrow (19th).
Kim Bo-reum, who suffered the pain of a bullying driving controversy four years ago, is aiming for a medal for the second time in a row.
This is Correspondent Ha Seong-ryong.
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Bo-reum Kim, along with other male athletes such as Seung-hoon Lee and Jae-won Jeong, tirelessly sprinted through the ice, and this time, sprints at full speed in joint training with 'Sprinter' Jun-ho Kim.
This is a speed-strengthening training to generate explosive power when hitting from the beginning or spurting at the end of the 16-lap mass start.
[Kim Bo- reum
/Speed Skating National Team: (Game) The flow itself became really fast from start to finish, so I needed more speed and more stamina.]
I went through great trials.
After that, even after winning a silver medal at the mass start, he couldn't smile and had to bow his head.
[Kim Bo-reum (2018): The only word that comes to mind right now is 'I'm sorry', so I have it.]
After the court's ruling that there was no 'bullying driving' recently came out, “The wound seems to have healed a little,” he said.
Tomorrow at Mass Start, we will go to 'Hanpuri'.
[Kim Bo-reum/Speed Skating National Team: If I feel like I have no regrets on my own, I want to compete without regrets because the results I want can follow.]
‘Defending champion’ Lee Seung-hoon, 34, and Pyeongchang’s youngest, 21-year-old who grew up as an ace Jung Jae-won is also aiming for the men's medal, and tomorrow, dreaming of a brilliant finish in Korean speed skating, will go out for the last run.
(Video coverage: Kim Seong-il, Hong Jong-su, video editing: Woo-jung Woo)