2008–09 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Men's 1500 metres

The 1500 metres distance for men in the 2008–09 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over six races on six occasions, out of a total of nine World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Berlin, Germany, on 7–9 November 2008, and the final occasion taking place in Salt Lake City, United States, on 6–7 March 2009.[1]

Shani Davis of the United States defended his title from the previous season, while fellow American Trevor Marsicano came second, and Håvard Bøkko of Norway came third.

On the last competition weekend of the season, Davis set a new world record of 1:41.80.

Top three

Medal Athlete Points Previous season
Gold Shani Davis4701st
Silver Trevor Marsicano37425th
Bronze Håvard Bøkko3639th

Race medallists

Occasion # Location Date Gold Time Silver Time Bronze Time Report
1 Berlin, Germany 8 November Sven Kramer
 Netherlands
1:45.69 Erben Wennemars
 Netherlands
1:45.85 Simon Kuipers
 Netherlands
1:45.95 [2]
2 Heerenveen, Netherlands 14 November Shani Davis
 United States
1:45.23 Stefan Groothuis
 Netherlands
1:45.84 Mark Tuitert
 Netherlands
1:45.90 [3]
3 Moscow, Russia 22 November Håvard Bøkko
 Norway
1:45.46 Mark Tuitert
 Netherlands
1:45.81 Enrico Fabris
 Italy
1:46.00 [4]
7 Erfurt, Germany 31 January Denny Morrison
 Canada
1:45.32 Trevor Marsicano
 United States
1:46.00 Shani Davis
 United States
1:46.25 [5]
8 Heerenveen, Netherlands 15 February Shani Davis
 United States
1:45.40 Enrico Fabris
 Italy
1:45.88 Trevor Marsicano
 United States
1:46.09 [6]
9 Salt Lake City, United States 6 March Shani Davis
 United States
1:41.80
WR
Trevor Marsicano
 United States
1:42.31 Denny Morrison
 Canada
1:42.56 [7]

Final standings

Standings as of 7 March 2009 (end of the season).[8][9]

#NameNat.BERHVN1MOSERFHVN2SLCTotal
1Shani Davis5010070100150470
2Trevor Marsicano2440408070120374
3Håvard Bøkko4560100501890363
4Enrico Fabris183670458045294
5Mark Tuitert60708063640292
6Chad Hedrick4045406075260
7Denny Morrison366100105247
8Sven Kramer100246045229
9Stefan Groothuis2880362450218
10Erben Wennemars805060190
11Simon Kuipers70324528175
12Lucas Makowsky211632362116142
13Yevgeny Lalenkov32185021121
14Christoffer Fagerli Rukke141212162424102
15Wouter olde Heuvel254036101
16Steven Elm4111818143297
17Teruhiro Sugimori2510821161292
18Konrad Niedźwiedzki16510283291
19Lee Jong-woo1521242888
20Robert Lehmann68213212079
21Ivan Skobrev28281874
22François-Olivier Roberge1214161061472
23Daniel Friberg198142566
24Sverre Haugli42512101061
25Samuel Schwarz51911843
26Mo Tae-bum82533
27Jörg Dallmann112144031
28Jan Friesinger19827
29Matteo Anesi10158226
30Jay Morrison61925
31Mikael Flygind-Larsen81523
32Tobias Schneider106521
33Stefan Heythausen015520
34Choi Kwun-won01919
35Dmitry Babenko30021116
36Pascal Briand00001515
37Song Xingyu60612
38Jeff Kitura001111
39Aleksey Yesin11810
40Aleksandr Lebedev2169
41Johan Röjler88
42Hiroki Hirako40408
43Denis Kuzin000066
44Jonathan Kuck44
45Marco Weber022
Timofey Skopin202
47Mathieu Giroux112

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.