In 1924, Gorman won his first Canadian outdoor championship and his first North American outdoor title. He fared less well at the
1924 Winter Olympics, finishing seventh in the
500 metres event and eleventh in the
1500 metres competition. He also participated in the
5000 metres event but did not finish. Gorman's approach to the sport proved to be more suited to the more combative North American system, where skaters all raced against each other at once, than to the European style used at the Olympics, where skaters raced in pairs against a clock. Gorman returned to previous form in 1926, winning both the Canadian outdoor and the North American indoor titles, and beating Olympic champion
Clas Thunberg of
Finland to claim the 1926 ISUA World Outdoor Speed Skating Championship. In 1927, Gorman claimed the mid-Atlantic, U.S. national outdoor, Canadian indoor championships, as well as both the international outdoor and indoor championships. Moreover, he retained his world title, and broke the
world record for the 1/6 mile event. In the
1928 Winter Olympics, Gorman again finished seventh in the
500 metres event and twelfth in the
1500 metres competition. Gorman refused to compete in the
5000 metres competition, when officials ruled that there had been no interference when a competitor fell in Gorman's path during the 500 metres event. ==Legacy==