2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Women's 1500 metres

The 1500 metres distance for women in the 2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over six races on six occasions, out of a total of seven World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Berlin, Germany, on 6–8 November 2009, and the final occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 12–14 March 2010.[1]

Kristina Groves of Canada successfully defended her title from the previous season, while fellow Canadian Christine Nesbitt came second, and Martina Sáblíková of the Czech Republic came third.

Top three

Medal Athlete Points Previous season
Gold Kristina Groves5601st
Silver Christine Nesbitt3743rd
Bronze Martina Sáblíková34816th

Race medallists

Occasion # Location Date Gold Time Silver Time Bronze Time Report
1 Berlin, Germany 8 November Christine Nesbitt
 Canada
1:55.54 Martina Sáblíková
 Czech Republic
1:56.99 Brittany Schussler
 Canada
1:57.26 [2]
2 Heerenveen, Netherlands 14 November Ireen Wüst
 Netherlands
1:56.69 Christine Nesbitt
 Canada
1:56.74 Kristina Groves
 Canada
1:57.05 [3]
3 Hamar, Norway 22 November Kristina Groves
 Canada
1:55.16 Ireen Wüst
 Netherlands
1:55.95 Martina Sáblíková
 Czech Republic
1:56.34 [4]
4 Calgary, Canada 5 December Kristina Groves
 Canada
1:54.35 Christine Nesbitt
 Canada
1:54.43 Elma de Vries
 Netherlands
1:54.55 [5]
5 Salt Lake City, United States 12 December Christine Nesbitt
 Canada
1:52.76 Kristina Groves
 Canada
1:53.32 Jennifer Rodriguez
 United States
1:54.19 [6]
7 Heerenveen, Netherlands 13 March Kristina Groves
 Canada
1:58.15 Martina Sáblíková
 Czech Republic
1:58.27 Brittany Schussler
 Canada
1:58.60 [7]

Final standings

Standings as of 14 March 2010 (end of the season).[8][9]

#NameNat.BERHVN1HAMCALSLCHVN2Total
1Kristina Groves607010010080150560
2Christine Nesbitt100808010014374
3Martina Sáblíková8010703236120348
4Brittany Schussler70216040105296
5Daniela Anschütz-Thoms3660602875259
6Ireen Wüst24100802132257
7Diane Valkenburg4545401290232
8Katarzyna Bachleda-Curuś212845502836208
9Jennifer Rodriguez2532457018190
10Yekaterina Shikhova1840364545184
11Anni Friesinger-Postma40504532167
12Maki Tabata161628186021159
13Margot Boer50361440140
14Elma de Vries2570145114
15Cindy Klassen3224241816114
16Alla Shabanova42550688101
17Nao Kodaira281215211288
18Annette Gerritsen619362485
19Monique Angermüller10195079
20Masako Hozumi15818824679
21Laurine van Riessen14252867
22Karolína Erbanová262425562
23Wang Fei81532055
24Jilleanne Rookard08214121055
25Noh Seon-yeong19181653
26Shannon Rempel161935
27Dong Feifei441601034
28Lee Ju-yeon1414634
29Catherine Raney195630
30Hege Bøkko1262222
31Natasja Bruintjes81119
Yekaterina Lobysheva81119
Luiza Złotkowska081119
34Galina Likhachova115016
35Paulien van Deutekom1515
Olga Graf1515
37Justine L'Heureux101213
38Katrin Mattscherodt508013
39Ida Njåtun11011
40Nancy Swider-Peltz, Jr01100011
41Marrit Leenstra10010
42Isabell Ost220610
43Fu Chunyan30609
44Maren Haugli0088
45Stephanie Beckert0606
Eriko Ishino60006
47Ji Jia105006
48Natalia Czerwonka00044
Katarzyna Woźniak0404
50Shiho Ishizawa22
51Yekaterina Abramova11
Nicole Garrido11
Anna Rokita000011

References

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