2013–14 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – World Cup 1 – Women's 3000 metres

The women's 3000 metres race of the 2013–14 ISU Speed Skating World Cup 1, arranged in the Olympic Oval, in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, was held on 8 November 2013.[1]

Claudia Pechstein of Germany won, while Martina Sáblíková of the Czech Republic came second, and Ireen Wüst of the Netherlands came third.[2] Antoinette de Jong of the Netherlands set a new world record for juniors with a time of 4:00.46.[2] Luiza Złotkowska of Poland won Division B.

Results

The race took place on Friday, 8 November, with Division A scheduled in the morning session, at 12:09, and Division B scheduled in the afternoon session, at 17:51.[3]

Division A

RankNameNat.PairLaneTimeWC pointsGWC points
1st, gold medalist(s)Claudia PechsteinGermany7o3:59.0410010
2nd, silver medalist(s)Martina SáblíkováCzech Republic8o3:59.39808
3rd, bronze medalist(s)Ireen WüstNetherlands7i3:59.68707
4Antoinette de JongNetherlands5i4:00.56606
5Jorien VoorhuisNetherlands5o4:01.09505
6Yvonne NautaNetherlands6o4:03.5045
7Ida NjåtunNorway2o4:04.6740
8Katarzyna Bachleda-CuruśPoland4i4:05.1835
9Linda de VriesNetherlands2i4:05.2430
10Nana TakagiJapan3o4:06.0025
11Olga GrafRussia6i4:06.0121
12Kim Bo-reumSouth Korea4o4:07.9318
13Brittany SchusslerCanada1o4:08.0616
14Yuliya SkokovaRussia3i4:08.4214
15Stephanie BeckertGermany8i4:09.2412
16Ivanie BlondinCanada1i4:13.4210

[4]

Division B

RankNameNat.PairLaneTimeWC points
1Luiza ZłotkowskaPoland11o4:03.6832
2Shiho IshizawaJapan14o4:04.3027
3Masako HozumiJapan12o4:04.7423
4Katarzyna WoźniakPoland5o4:04.8219
5Jilleanne RookardUnited States16o4:05.8415
6Jennifer BayGermany10o4:06.0211
7Ayaka KikuchiJapan19i4:06.279
8Bente KrausGermany17o4:06.307
9Natalia CzerwonkaPoland19o4:06.386
10Jelena PeetersBelgium18i4:07.345
11Francesca LollobrigidaItaly6i4:07.474
12Anna ChernovaRussia15o4:08.343
13Miho TakagiJapan13o4:08.492
14Anna RokitaAustria14i4:08.511
15Noh Seon-yeongSouth Korea8i4:08.71
16Mari HemmerNorway18o4:09.54
Yang Shin-youngSouth Korea7o4:09.54
18Viktoriya FilyushkinaRussia12i4:09.98
19Nicole GarridoCanada2o4:10.14
20Park Do-yeongSouth Korea16i4:10.25
21Brianne TuttCanada15i4:10.54
22Camilla FarestveitNorway7i4:12.22
23Lada ZadonskayaRussia10i4:12.78
24Petra AckerUnited States13i4:13.05
25Yelena UrvantsevaKazakhstan9o4:13.14
26Jun Ye-jinSouth Korea5i4:13.42
27Isabell OstGermany11i4:13.90
28Anna RingsredUnited States6o4:13.92
29Daniela OlteanRomania4o4:15.37
30Liu JingChina1i4:16.12
31Johanna ÖstlundSweden8o4:18.63
32Tatyana MikhailovaBelarus3i4:18.72
33Sara Bak-BriandDenmark4i4:18.89
34Saskia AlusaluEstonia3o4:20.12
35Nikola ZdráhalováCzech Republic9i4:20.20
36Lauren McGuireCanada17i4:21.41
37Brooke LochlandAustralia2i4:23.54

[5]

References

  1. "Essent ISU World Cup Announcement" (PDF). International Skating Union. Retrieved 18 September 2013.
  2. 1 2 "Koen Verweij (NED) takes gold in the 1500 m Men". International Skating Union. 8 November 2013. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  3. "Essent ISU World Cup Calgary". International Skating Union. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  4. "Essent ISU World Cup Calgary – November 8-10, 2013 – Result 3000m Ladies Division A – Rankings as of Nov 8 2013 7:15PM". International Skating Union. 8 November 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-11-09. Retrieved 9 November 2013.
  5. "Essent ISU World Cup Calgary – November 8-10, 2013 – Result 3000m Ladies Division B – Rankings as of Nov 8 2013 7:15PM". International Skating Union. 8 November 2013. Retrieved 9 November 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.