Viktor An

Viktor An
Ahn in 2016
Personal information
Birth nameAhn Hyun-soo
안현수
Born (1985-11-23) November 23, 1985
Seoul, South Korea
Height1.70 m (5 ft 7 in)
Weight65 kg (143 lb)
Spouse
Woo Nari
(m. 2014)
Sport
Country South Korea (until 2011)
 Russia (since 2011)
SportShort track speed skating
RetiredApril 27, 2020
Achievements and titles
World finalsWorld Championship
2014 Overall
2007 Overall
2006 Overall
2005 Overall
2004 Overall
2003 Overall
World Cup
2006 Overall
2004 Overall
Personal best(s)500 m: 39.961 (2019)
1000 m: 1:23.487 (2013)
1500 m: 2:10.639 (2003, Former WR)
3000 m: 4:32.646 (2003, Former WR)
Medal record
Event 1st 2nd 3rd
Olympic Games 6 0 2
World Championships 20 10 5
World Team Championships 2 3 1
European Championships 8 6 2
World Junior Championships 4 0 1
Winter Universiade 3 0 1
Asian Games 5 1 0
Total 48 20 12
Representing  Russia
Olympic Games
2014 Sochi500 m
2014 Sochi1000 m
2014 Sochi5000 m relay
2014 Sochi1500 m
World Championships
2014 MontrealOverall
2014 Montreal1000 m
2013 Debrecen500 m
2013 Debrecen5000 m relay
2014 Montreal3000 m
2017 Rotterdam3000 m
European Championships
2013 Malmö5000 m relay
2014 DebrecenOverall
2014 Debrecen500 m
2014 Debrecen1000 m
2014 Debrecen3000 m
2014 Debrecen5000 m relay
2015 Dordrecht500 m
2015 Dordrecht5000 m relay
2013 Malmö1000m
2015 DordrechtOverall
2015 Dordrecht3000 m
2017 Turin5000 m relay
2018 Dresden500 m
2018 Dresden5000 m relay
2013 Malmö500 m
2017 Turin500 m
Representing  South Korea
Olympic Games
2006 Turin1000 m
2006 Turin1500 m
2006 Turin5000 m relay
2006 Turin500 m
World Championships
2002 Montreal5000 m relay
2003 WarsawOverall
2003 Warsaw1500 m
2003 Warsaw3000 m
2003 Warsaw5000 m relay
2004 GothenburgOverall
2004 Gothenburg1000 m
2004 Gothenburg1500 m
2004 Gothenburg3000 m
2004 Gothenburg5000 m relay
2005 BeijingOverall
2005 Beijing1500 m
2006 MinneapolisOverall
2006 Minneapolis1000 m
2006 Minneapolis1500 m
2007 MilanOverall
2007 Milan1000 m
2007 Milan5000 m relay
2002 MontrealOverall
2002 Montreal1000 m
2002 Montreal3000 m
2003 Warsaw1000 m
2005 Beijing1000 m
2005 Beijing3000 m
2005 Beijing5000 m relay
2007 Milan3000 m
2005 Beijing500 m
2007 Milan500 m
2007 Milan1500 m
World Team Championships
2004 St. PetersburgTeam
2006 MontréalTeam
2003 SofiaTeam
2005 ChuncheonTeam
2007 BudapestTeam
2002 MilwaukeeTeam
World Junior Championships
2002 ChuncheonOverall
2002 Chuncheon1000 m
2002 Chuncheon1500 m
2002 Chuncheon2000 m relay
2002 Chuncheon1500 m S.F.
Winter Universiade
2005 Innsbruck1500 m
2005 Innsbruck3000 m
2005 Innsbruck5000 m relay
2005 Innsbruck1000 m
Asian Winter Games
2003 Aomori1000 m
2003 Aomori1500 m
2003 Aomori5000 m relay
2007 Changchun1000 m
2007 Changchun5000 m relay
2007 Changchun1500 m
Victor An
Hangul
빅토르 안
Hanja
빅토르 安
Revised RomanizationBiktoreu An
McCune–ReischauerPikt'orŭ An
Ahn Hyun-soo
Hangul
안현수
Hanja
安賢洙
Revised RomanizationAn Hyeonsu
McCune–ReischauerAn Hyŏnsu

Viktor An (Russian: Виктор Ан; born Ahn Hyun-soo (Korean: 안현수) on November 23, 1985), is a South Korean-born Russian short-track speed skating coach and retired short-track speed skater. With a total of eight Olympic medals, six gold and two bronze, he is the only short track speed skater in Olympic history to win gold in every distance, and the first to win a medal in every distance at a single Games. He has the most Olympic gold medals in the sport, three of which he won in the 2006 Winter Olympics and the other three in the 2014 Winter Olympics. Considered to be the greatest short track speed skater of all time, he is a six-time overall World champion (2003–2007, 2014), two-time overall World Cup winner (2003–04, 2005–06), and the 2014 European champion. He holds the most overall titles at the World Short Track Speed Skating Championships, and is the only male short track skater to win five consecutive world titles.

In 2008, Ahn suffered a knee injury and could not regain his health by the time the national qualifiers for Vancouver 2010 came around. His recovery being slow and his South Korean local team dissolved in 2010, Ahn, aiming for his second Olympics, became a Russian citizen the next year and began racing for the Russian team. After winning gold in Sochi, Ahn explained his reasons for joining the Russian team saying, "I wanted to train in the best possible environment and I proved my decision was not wrong." As expected, a gold-winning athlete leaving the national team caused public uproar in South Korea. However, it was aimed not at Ahn, but at the country's skating union. Most South Korean fans in a poll said they understood his decision. Ahn continued his skating career in his adopted nation until 2019 and declared his retirement in April 2020.

In 2023, Ahn returned to Korea as a short track leader. Ahn returned to South Korea and applied to be a coach for Seongnam's short track speed skating team, despite having renounced his South Korean citizenship when becoming Russian. However, since his change in 2014 he had been increasingly criticized for his work in Russia amid the Russo-Ukrainian War and his coaching position in the Chinese team at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. Some Korean coaches have formed The Korea Skating Coaches' Union and urged "Seongnam to appoint a coach that meets the public eye level" and criticized Ahn that he "lied during the naturalization process and betrayed his country". and He was criticized by the public for betraying his country by transferring Korean sports skills to Russia and China. Ahn was eventually denied the coaching position due to significant public opposition.

After being denied his position as Seongnam City Hall coach due to strong public opposition, Ahn explained the controversy he knew about his loss of nationality in advance and receives a full Olympic medal pension prior to Russian naturalization. He said: "I donated every pension I had received prior to naturalization". According to his explanation and a Korean ice skating official mentioned in Chosun Ilbo shortly thereafter, the entire lump sum pension he received was spent on rehabilitating "children who needed heart surgery and Korean junior players". And he make his first start as a Korean Sports leader, being named as a coach in the 2023–2024 national team trials at the request of his juniors. The Korea Skating Union officially announced this through Yonhap News Agency, and the Korean media reported it collectively.