Netherlands at the 2006 Winter Olympics | |
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IOC code | NED |
NOC | Dutch Olympic Committee* Dutch Sports Federation |
Website | www |
in Turin | |
Competitors | 33 (16 men, 17 women) in 4 sports |
Flag bearer (opening) | Jan Bos (speedskating) [1] |
Flag bearer (closing) | Rintje Ritsma (speedskating) [2] |
Medals Ranked 10th |
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Winter Olympics appearances (overview) | |
Athletes from the Netherlands competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. The team of 35 competed in speed skating, bobsleigh, short track speed skating and snowboarding. The Dutch flag bearer during the opening ceremony was speedskater Jan Bos.
Historically, the Dutch have only won medals in skating; of their 78 Winter Olympic medals since 1952, 75 have been won in speed skating, and a further three in figure skating. The Netherlands have not won a figure skating medal since 1976.
Dirk Matschenz (skeleton) did meet the limits set by the Dutch Olympic Committee but did not participate because he did not get his Dutch passport before the start of the Olympics. Matschenz is originally from Germany.
Medal | Name | Sport | Event |
---|---|---|---|
![]() | Ireen Wüst | Speed skating | Women's 3000 m |
![]() | Marianne Timmer | Speed skating | Women's 1000 m |
![]() | Bob de Jong | Speed skating | Men's 10000 m |
![]() | Sven Kramer | Speed skating | Men's 5000 m |
![]() | Renate Groenewold | Speed skating | Women's 3000 m |
![]() | Sven Kramer Rintje Ritsma Mark Tuitert Carl Verheijen Erben Wennemars | Speed skating | Men's team pursuit |
![]() | Erben Wennemars | Speed skating | Men's 1000 m |
![]() | Ireen Wüst | Speed skating | Women's 1500 m |
![]() | Carl Verheijen | Speed skating | Men's 10000 m |
Athlete | Event | Final | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Run 1 | Run 2 | Run 3 | Run 4 | Total | Rank | ||
Ilse Broeders Jeanette Pennings | Two-woman | 1:00.13 | did not start | ||||
Arend Glas Sybren Jansma | Two-man | 56.70 | 56.54 | 56.95 | 57.15 | 3:47.36 | 19 |
Eline Jurg Kitty van Haperen | Two-woman | 58.05 | 58.08 | 58.42 | 58.35 | 3:52.90 | 11 |
Arend Glas Sybren Jansma Arno Klaassen Vincent Kortbeek | Four-man | 55.82 | 56.08 | 55.78 | 55.51 | 3:43.19 | 16 |
Athlete | Event | Heat | Quarterfinal | Semifinal | Final | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | ||
Cees Juffermans | Men's 500 m | 42.849 | 3 Q | 42.515 | 3 | did not advance | 11 | ||
Men's 1500 m | 2:27.696 | 2 Q | — | DNF | did not advance | 16 | |||
Niels Kerstholt | Men's 1000 m | disqualified | did not advance | ||||||
Men's 1500 m | 2:23.854 | 2 Q | — | 2:21.748 | 3 | Final B 2:24.962 | 10 | ||
Liesbeth Mau Asam | Women's 500 m | 45.500 | 3 | did not advance | 15 | ||||
Women's 1000 m | 1:38.039 | 2 Q | 1:34.034 | 3 | did not advance | 10 | |||
Women's 1500 m | 2:28.910 | 2 Q | — | 2:26.370 | 6 | did not advance | 14 |
Two women were selected for the Netherlands in snowboarding events in Torino; Cheryl Maas for the halfpipe event and Nicolien Sauerbreij in the parallel giant slalom event. Maas qualified in 4th place for the final, but on her final run, Maas landed on the top edge of the halfpipe, fell and ended up in 11th.
Athlete | Event | Qualifying Run 1 | Qualifying Run 2 | Final | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Points | Rank | Points | Rank | Run 1 | Run 2 | Rank | ||
Cheryl Maas | Women's halfpipe | 38.6 | 4 Q | n/a | (8.7) | 16.5 | 11 |
Note: In the final, the single best score from two runs is used to determine the ranking. A bracketed score indicates a run that wasn't counted.
Athlete | Event | Qualification | Round of 16 | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Opposition time | Opposition time | Opposition time | Opposition time | Rank | ||
Nicolien Sauerbreij | Women's parallel giant slalom | 1:22.17 | 12 | ![]() L+0.03 (-1.50+1.53) | did not advance | 12 |
Key: '+ Time' represents a deficit; the brackets indicate the results of each run.
Athlete | Event | Race 1 | Race 2 | Final | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | ||||
Jan Bos | 500 m | 35.68 | 35.43 | 1:11.11 | 11 |
1000 m | n/a | 1:09.42 | 5 | ||
1500 m | n/a | 1:48.61 | 20 | ||
Bob de Jong | 5000 m | n/a | 6:22.12 | 6 | |
10000 m | n/a | 13:01.57 | ![]() | ||
Stefan Groothuis | 1000 m | n/a | 1:09.57 | 8 | |
Sven Kramer | 1500 m | n/a | 1:48.36 | 15 | |
5000 m | n/a | 6:16.40 | ![]() | ||
10000 m | n/a | 13:18.14 | 7 | ||
Simon Kuipers | 500 m | 36.10 | 35.74 | 1:11.84 | 23 |
1500 m | n/a | 1:46.58 | 4 | ||
Beorn Nijenhuis | 500 m | 48.84 | 35.71 | 1:24.55 | 35 |
1000 m | n/a | 1:09.85 | 12 | ||
Carl Verheijen | 5000 m | n/a | 6:18.84 | 4 | |
10000 m | n/a | 13:08.80 | ![]() | ||
Erben Wennemars | 500 m | 35.46 | 35.84 | 1:11.30 | 16 |
1000 m | n/a | 1:09.32 | ![]() | ||
1500 m | n/a | 1:46.71 | 5 |
Athlete | Event | Race 1 | Race 2 | Final | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | ||||
Barbara De Loor | 1000 m | n/a | 1:16.73 | 6 | |
Annette Gerritsen | 500 m | 39.12 | 38.97 | 1:18.09 | 12 |
1000 m | n/a | 1:18.33 | 23 | ||
Renate Groenewold | 1500 m | n/a | 1:59.33 | 9 | |
3000 m | n/a | 4:03.48 | ![]() | ||
5000 m | n/a | 7:11.32 | 9 | ||
Carien Kleibeuker | 5000 m | n/a | 7:12.18 | 10 | |
Moniek Kleinsman | 3000 m | n/a | 4:13.81 | 17 | |
Marianne Timmer | 500 m | disqualified | |||
1000 m | n/a | 1:16.05 | ![]() | ||
1500 m | n/a | 2:00.45 | 14 | ||
Paulien van Deutekom | 1500 m | n/a | 2:00.15 | 13 | |
Sanne van der Star | 500 m | 39.26 | 39.33 | 1:18.59 | 14 |
Ireen Wüst | 1000 m | n/a | 1:16.39 | 4 | |
1500 m | n/a | 1:56.90 | ![]() | ||
3000 m | n/a | 4:02.43 | ![]() |
Athlete | Event | Seeding | Quarterfinal | Semifinal | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Opposition time | Opposition time | Opposition time | Rank | ||
Sven Kramer Rintje Ritsma Mark Tuitert Carl Verheijen Erben Wennemars | Men's team pursuit | 3:48.02 | 3 | ![]() W3:44.65 | ![]() LOvertaken | Bronze final![]() W3:44.53 | ![]() |
Paulien van Deutekom Renate Groenewold Moniek Kleinsman Gretha Smit Ireen Wüst | Women's team pursuit | 3:06.67 | 4 | ![]() L3:03.65 | did not advance | 5th place final![]() L3:05.62 | 6 |
Australia competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. The team of 40 athletes was the largest ever for Australia, surpassing the team of 31 that participated at the 1960 Winter Olympics.
Canada competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy, with a team of 196 athletes and 220 support staff.
Norway sent 74 athletes to the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. At the 2002 Winter Olympics Norway won the most gold medals, and before the Turin games, Norwegian sports officials were aiming for more than the 25 medals they won in Salt Lake City — the president of the Norwegian Skiing Federation Sverre Seeberg was quoted saying he thought Norway would win 25 medals in the skiing events alone. The Norwegian Olympic Committee aimed for Norway to be the best nation measured in the number of gold medals. However, Norway won only two gold medals in the games, the lowest amount since 1988.
The United Kingdom competed under the name Great Britain at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. Athletes from Northern Ireland were generally free to participate for either this team or the Ireland team under a long-standing settlement between the British Olympic Association and the Olympic Council of Ireland. Forty-one athletes were selected for these Winter Games.
New Zealand competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy.
France competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. France is represented by the National Olympic Committee of France.
Sweden sent 112 athletes to the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin trying to win their first gold medal since the 1994 Olympics in Lillehammer. A total of 99 athletes were selected, and they competed in nine of the fifteen Winter Olympic sports. When the medals were summed up, Sweden had managed seven gold medals, two silver and five bronze, making it Sweden's best result ever in the Winter Olympics in terms of both medals and gold medals earned, and gave Sweden a 6th place in the medal table.
Germany competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy, winning once again the most total medals of any nation. The National Olympic Committee of Germany nominated a total of 162 (164) athletes to compete, as the 5th largest team, in all 15 of the Winter Olympic sports.
Finland competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy, with 102 athletes competing in 11 of the 15 sports.
Switzerland competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. This was the confederation's largest Winter Olympics team ever, because two ice hockey teams qualified.
Bulgaria competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy.
The Czech Republic competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. Speed skater Martina Sáblíková served as flag bearer at the opening ceremonies. The medal hopes were set on ice hockey team, Jakub Janda in ski jumping, Kateřina Neumannová in cross-country skiing and on Sáblíková. As for hockey team, the bronze medal was less than most of Czech fans awaited before the olympic, and more than they hoped for after the group stage. But the strongest moment for Czech sport fans was unbelievable finish of Kateřina Neumannová in cross-country skiing, where she on the last meters of 30 km run got from the third to first position. It was her last Olympic start and it was finally a gold one, and the view of her little daughter running to her as the first to congratulate will be a lasting moment of Turin 2006.
Italy was the host nation for the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin. It was the second time that Italy had hosted the Winter Games and the third time overall. Italy's flag bearer for the opening ceremony was figure skater Carolina Kostner. Kostner's cousin, Isolde Kostner, was Italy's flag bearer at the 2002 Winter Olympics.
Japan competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. Shizuka Arakawa won the country's only medal, a gold, in women's figure skating. She was the first person born and raised in Asia to become an Olympic champion in that event. Athletes representing Japan participated in all but one of the 2006 Olympics' 15 sports, with Ice hockey the only exception.
Slovakia competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy.
Russia participated at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. It sent a total of 190 athletes to participate in all 15 of the Winter Olympic sports.
Poland competed at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy.
The Netherlands competed at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia from 7 to 23 February 2014. The Dutch team was the largest Dutch delegation at a Winter Olympics, with 41 competitors that participated in bobsleigh, short track speed skating, snowboarding, and speed skating.
China competed at the 2018 Winter Olympics in PyeongChang, South Korea, from 9 to 25 February 2018. China competed in 12 sports, participating in bobsleigh, skeleton and ski jumping for the first time. China won 9 medals in total.
The Netherlands competed at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea, between 9 and 25 February 2018. Speed skater Jan Smeekens was appointed as flag bearer for the opening ceremony, which was attended by King Willem Alexander, Queen Máxima and Prime Minister Mark Rutte, who also observed the sporting events that featured Dutch competitors.