2016 European Speed Skating Championships | |||||||||||||
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Venue | Minsk-Arena, Minsk, Belarus [1] | ||||||||||||
Dates | 9–10 January 2016 [1] | ||||||||||||
Medalist men | |||||||||||||
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Medalist women | |||||||||||||
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The 2016 European Speed Skating Championships were held in Minsk, Belarus, from 9 to 10 January 2016. Skaters from 17 countries participated. [2]
Sven Kramer and Ireen Wüst of the Netherlands were the defending champions. Kramer successfully defended his title, winning a record 8th title overall, and Martina Sáblíková of the Czech Republic won her 5th title. [3]
The schedule of events: [4]
Date | Events |
---|---|
Saturday, 9 January 15:00h | 500 m women 500 m men 3000 m women 5000 m men |
Sunday, 10 January 15:00h | 1500 m women 1500 m men 5000 m women 10,000 m men |
DNS = did not start, WDR = withdrew, DQ = disqualified
500 metres
| 5000 metres
|
1500 metres
| 10,000 metres
|
Rank | Skater | Nat. | 500 m | 5000 m | 1500 m | 10,000 m | Points | Behind |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sven Kramer | 36.56 (4) | 6:19.17 (1) | 1:48.08 (5) | 13:11.98 (1) | 150.102 | |||
Bart Swings | 36.73 (9) | 6:24.91 (3) | 1:46.41 (2) | 13:15.47 (2) | 150.464 | +0.37 | ||
Jan Blokhuijsen | 36.57 (5) | 6:22.36 (2) | 1:48.79 (9) | 13:22.14 (3) | 151.176 | +1.08 | ||
4 | Håvard Bøkko | 36.63 (6) | 6:31.62 (4) | 1:48.87 (10) | 13:35.21 (4) | 152.842 | +2.74 | |
5 | Andrea Giovannini | 36.87 (11) | 6:32.22 (5) | 1:48.97 (12) | 13:41.39 (5) | 153.484 | +3.39 | |
6 | Haralds Silovs | 36.70 (7) | 6:33.83 (6) | 1:48.46 (6) | 13:53.25 (6) | 153.898 | +3.80 | |
7 | Jan Szymański | 37.21 (16) | 6:34.43 (7) | 1:47.48 (3) | 13:57.27 (7) | 154.342 | +4.24 | |
8 | Sindre Henriksen | 36.71 (8) | 6:38.23 (10) | 1:48.56 (7) | 14:16.64 (8) | 155.551 | +5.45 | |
9 | Denis Yuskov | 36.23 (1) | 6:35.81 (8) | 1:45.18 (1) | 110.871 | |||
10 | Zbigniew Bródka | 36.46 (2) | 6:42.80 (15) | 1:48.05 (4) | 112.756 | |||
11 | Sergey Gryaztsov | 37.02 (14) | 6:39.18 (12) | 1:48.70 (8) | 113.171 | |||
12 | Vitaly Mikhailov | 36.88 (12) | 6:38.56 (11) | 1:49.98 (14) | 113.396 | |||
13 | Sergey Trofimov | 36.97 (13) | 6:41.84 (14) | 1:48.92 (11) | 113.460 | |||
14 | Nicola Tumolero | 37.19 (15) | 6:36.40 (9) | 1:50.48 (15) | 113.656 | |||
15 | Linus Heidegger | 37.23 (17) | 6:43.13 (16) | 1:50.49 (16) | 114.373 | |||
16 | Konrád Nagy | 36.48 (3) | 6:58.03 (20) | 1:49.03 (13) | 114.626 | |||
17 | Livio Wenger | 37.38 (18) | 6:44.78 (17) | 1:51.13 (17) | 114.901 | |||
18 | Felix Maly | 38.76 (23) | 6:46.08 (18) | 1:55.24 (19) | 117.781 | |||
19 | Iñigo Vidondo | 38.25 (20) | 6:58.59 (21) | 1:53.62 (18) | 117.982 | |||
20 | Tuomas Rahnasto | 38.50 (22) | 7:02.48 (22) | 1:56.24 (20) | 119.494 | |||
21 | Piotr Puszkarski | 36.76 (10) | 6:51.77 (19) | DQ (21) | – | |||
22 | Douwe de Vries | 37.75 (19) | 6:41.56 (13) | WDR (22) | – | |||
23 | Sverre Lunde Pedersen | WDR (24) | WDR (24) | – | ||||
24 | Jonas Pflug | 38.37 (21) | DNS (23) | – |
500 metres
| 3000 metres
|
1500 metres
| 5000 metres
|
Rank | Skater | Nat. | 500 m | 3000 m | 1500 m | 5000 m | Points | Behind |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Martina Sáblíková | 39.98 (4) | 4:03.79 (1) | 1:57.00 (1) | 6:58.44 (1) | 161.455 | |||
Ireen Wüst | 39.90 (3) | 4:07.32 (3) | 1:57.01 (2) | 7:10.65 (4) | 163.188 | +1.74 | ||
Antoinette de Jong | 39.76 (2) | 4:09.00 (4) | 1:58.80 (4) | 7:11.83 (5) | 164.043 | +2.59 | ||
4 | Marije Joling | 40.33 (6) | 4:07.14 (2) | 1:58.90 (5) | 7:10.10 (2) | 164.163 | +2.71 | |
5 | Natalya Voronina | 40.46 (8) | 4:09.61 (5) | 2:01.46 (10) | 7:10.19 (3) | 165.566 | +4.12 | |
6 | Ida Njåtun | 39.74 (1) | 4:10.69 (6) | 1:58.51 (3) | 7:25.92 (7) | 165.616 | +4.17 | |
7 | Olga Graf | 40.57 (11) | 4:16.06 (8) | 1:59.00 (6) | 7:23.33 (6) | 167.245 | +5.79 | |
8 | Francesca Lollobrigida | 40.57 (11) | 4:15.40 (7) | 2:01.90 (11) | 7:38.11 (8) | 169.580 | +8.13 | |
9 | Elizaveta Kazelina | 40.18 (5) | 4:16.13 (9) | 2:00.02 (9) | 122.874 | |||
10 | Luiza Złotkowska | 40.47 (9) | 4:16.68 (10) | 1:59.40 (7) | 123.050 | |||
11 | Natalia Czerwonka | 40.36 (7) | 4:18.20 (12) | 1:59.57 (8) | 123.249 | |||
12 | Marina Zueva | 40.54 (10) | 4:17.80 (11) | 2:03.89 (14) | 124.802 | |||
13 | Nikola Zdráhalová | 40.89 (14) | 4:19.54 (13) | 2:03.15 (12) | 125.196 | |||
14 | Sofie-Karoline Haugen | 41.07 (15) | 4:22.40 (14) | 2:03.50 (13) | 125.969 | |||
15 | Tatyana Mikhailova | 40.63 (13) | 4:29.60 (17) | 2:04.10 (15) | 126.929 | |||
16 | Leia Behlau | 42.30 (16) | 4:27.12 (16) | 2:06.46 (16) | 128.973 | |||
17 | Saskia Alusalu | 43.09 (17) | 4:24.31 (15) | 2:07.49 (17) | 129.637 |
Sven Kramer is a Dutch long track speed skater who has won an all time record nine World Allround Championships as well as a record ten European Allround Championships. He is the Olympic champion of the 5000 meters at the Vancouver 2010, Sochi 2014 and Pyeongchang 2018 Olympics, and won a record 21 gold medals at the World Single Distance Championships; eight in the 5000 meters, five in the 10,000 meters, and eight in the team pursuit. Kramer is the current world record holder in the team pursuit, and broke the world records in the 5000 meter and 10,000 meter events three times. By winning the 2010 World Allround Championship, Kramer became the first speed skater in history to win four consecutive world allround championships, and eight consecutive international allround championships. He was undefeated in the 18 international allround championships he participated in from the 2006/2007 season until the 2016/2017 season. From November 2007 to March 2009 he was ranked first in the Adelskalender, but despite his dominance as an all-round skater he has since been overtaken on that list by Shani Davis and, more recently, by his team mate Patrick Roest.
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