Yep Kramer

Last updated

Yep Kramer
Wereldkampioenschappen schaatsen heren allround in Heerenveen Yep Kramer tijden, Bestanddeelnr 930-6935.jpg
Personal information
Born (1957-11-15) 15 November 1957 (age 65)
Nieuweschoot, Netherlands
Sport
Country Netherlands
Sport Speed skating
Turned pro1976
Retired1992
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s)500 m: 38.6 (1982)
1000 m: 1:17.17 (1981)
1500 m: 1:57.42 (1983)
3000 m: 4:06.75 (1983)
5000 m: 7:04.97 (1992)
10 000 m: 14:03.92 (1987)
Medal record
Men's speed skating
Representing the Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Netherlands
European Championships
Silver medal icon (S initial).svg1983 The HagueAll round
Dutch Marathon Championships
Gold medal icon (G initial).svg1995 ErmerzandNatural Ice

Yep Kramer (born 15 November 1957) is a Dutch-Frisian long track and marathon speed skater. He is the father of speed skaters Sven Kramer and Brecht Kramer.

Contents

In 1985, 1986 and 1997 he participated in the Elfstedentocht (Eleven Cities Tour), the world's largest speed skating competition. In 1997 he finished the almost 200 km long race in 8th position.

In 1993 and 1996 he participated in the Dutch natural track marathon championships (100 km). In 1993 he came in 4th and in 1996 he won the Dutch natural track marathon championships (100 km).

Personal records

To put these personal records in perspective, the WR column lists the official world records on the dates that Kramer skated his personal records.

EventResultDateVenueWR
500 m38.614 February 1982 Davos 36.91
1,000 m1:17.1731 January 1981 Davos 1:13.60
1,500 m1:57.426 March 1983 Inzell 1:54.79
3,000 m4:06.753 March 1983 Inzell 4:04.06
5,000 m7:04.972 January 1992 Heerenveen 6:41.73
10,000 m14:49.52 March 1987 Heerenveen 14:03.92
Big combination 166.8446 March 1983 Inzell 162.973

Kramer has an Adelskalender score of 164.712 points.

Tournament overview


Season
Dutch
Championships
Single
Distances
Dutch
Championships
Allround
Dutch
Championships
Sprint
European
Championships
Allround
World
Championships
Allround
Olympic
Games
World
Championships
Junior
Allround

1975–1976
MADONNA di
CAMPIGLIO

29th 500m
12th 3000m
11th 1500m
14th 5000m
15th overall

1976–1977
INZELL

13th 500m
Silver medal icon.svg 3000m
5th 1500m
4th 5000m
5th overall

1977–1978
EINDHOVEN

10th 500m
8th 5000m
6th 1500m
8th 10000m
6th overall

1978–1979
HEERENVEEN

4th 500m
4th 5000m
Silver medal icon.svg 1500m
4th 10000m
Silver medal icon.svg overall
OSLO

16th 500m
10th 5000m
14th 1500m
12th 10000m
11th overall

1979–1980
THE HAGUE

7th 500m
Gold medal icon.svg 5000m
4th 1500m
4th 10000m
Silver medal icon.svg overall
TRONDHEIM

7th 500m
6th 5000m
11th 1500m
12th 10000m
7th overall
HEERENVEEN

DQ 500m
5th 5000m
Bronze medal icon.svg 1500m
DNQ 10000m
NC overall
LAKE PLACID

9th 5000m
11th 10000m

1980–1981
ASSEN

5th 500m
4th 5000m
4th 1500m
4th 10000m
4th overall
DEVENTER

11th 500m
12th 5000m
7th 1500m
11th 10000m
11th overall
OSLO

22nd 500m
19th 5000m
20th 1500m
DNQ 10000m
NC overall(22nd)

1981–1982
HEERENVEEN

5th 500m
6th 5000m
4th 1500m
5th 10000m
4th overall
OSLO

9th 500m
17th 5000m
19th 1500m
DNQ 10000m
NC overall(18th)
ASSEN

31st 500m
14th 5000m
12th 1500m
12th 10000m
16th overall

1982–1983
DEVENTER

5th 500m
4th 5000m
Silver medal icon.svg 1500m
4th 10000m
4th overall
UTRECHT

5th 500m
Gold medal icon.svg 1000m
9th 500m
Gold medal icon.svg 1000m
4th overall
THE HAGUE

5th 500m
Bronze medal icon.svg 5000m
Bronze medal icon.svg 1500m
7th 10000m
Silver medal icon.svg overall
OSLO

11th 500m
Silver medal icon.svg 5000m
5th 1500m
6th 10000m
4th overall

1983–1984
GRONINGEN

7th 500m
Silver medal icon.svg 5000m
Bronze medal icon.svg 1500m
4th 10000m
Bronze medal icon.svg overall
LARVIK

11th 500m
9th 5000m
7th 1500m
8th 10000m
7th overall
GOTHENBURG

6th 500m
6th 5000m
6th 1500m
13th 10000m
6th overall
SARAJEVO

9th 10000m
1984–1985

1985–1986
ASSEN

9th 500m
9th 5000m
6th 1500m
8th 10000m
6th overall
UTRECHT

6th 500m
17th 1000m
15th 500m
12th overall
OSLO

13th 500m
14th 5000m
19th 1500m
11th 10000m
12th overall
1991–1992
HEERENVEEN

8th 5000m

Medals won

ChampionshipGold
Gold medal icon.svg
Silver
Silver medal icon.svg
Bronze
Bronze medal icon.svg
Dutch Allround Classification
0
2
1
Dutch Allround Single Event
1
1
1
Dutch Sprint Single Event
2
0
0
European Allround Classification
0
1
0
European Allround Single Event
0
0
2
World Allround Single Event
0
1
1
World Junior Allround Single Event
0
1
0

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chad Hedrick</span> American speed skater

Chad Hedrick is an American inline speed skater and ice speed skater. He was born in Spring, Texas.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gunda Niemann-Stirnemann</span> German speed skater

Gunda Niemann-Stirnemann is a German former speed skater. She is a three-time Olympic gold medallist, winning the 3000 metres in 1992 and 1998 and the 5000 metres in 1992. She won a total of eight Olympic medals.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bart Veldkamp</span> Dutch speed skater

Bart Veldkamp is a retired speed skater, who represented the Netherlands and later Belgium in international competitions, including the Winter Olympics. He currently is the national speed skating coach of Belgium.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rintje Ritsma</span> Dutch speed skater

Robert Rintje Ritsma is a Dutch former long track speed skater. His nickname is the Beer van Lemmer, which translates to the Bear from Lemmer, analogous to Igor Zhelezovski's nickname "The Bear from Minsk", both of which are in reference to their imposing physical appearance.

The Adelskalender in skating is a ranking for long track speed skating based on skaters' all-time personal records for certain distances. As in samalog competitions, the skater's time for each distance is divided in 500 metre averages, truncated to 3 decimal places, and the results are then added up – the lower the sum, the better. The samalog system was introduced in 1928 in Norway, replacing ranking points in the traditional 4 distance championships, and can also be used to reconstruct scores based on personal records that were set before the samalog system was invented.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gianni Romme</span> Dutch speed skater

Gianni Petrus Cornelis Romme is a Dutch marathoner and a former long track speed skater. He won two gold medals at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano and was the World all-round champion in 2000 and 2003. Romme has been a coach since the 2006–07 speed skating season.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sven Kramer</span> Dutch speed skater

Sven Kramer is a retired 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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Piet Kleine</span> Dutch speed skater

Pieter "Piet" Kleine is a former speed skater from the Netherlands who specialized in the longer distances.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mark Tuitert</span> Dutch speed skater

Mark Jan Hendrik Tuitert is a retired Dutch speed skater. He won gold at the 1500 m at the 2010 Winter Olympics.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Falko Zandstra</span> Dutch speed skater

Falko Zandstra is a former Dutch speed skater. Because of his thin legs he was also called de Gespierde Spijker which translates to the Muscular Nail.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roberto Sighel</span> Italian speed skater

Roberto Sighel is an Italian former speedskater, with particularly strong achievements in the allround samalogue competitions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Henk Angenent</span> Dutch speed skater (born 1967)

Henk Angenent is a retired Dutch speed skater, specialising in marathon skating and the longer distances. Angenent won the Elfstedentocht on 4 January 1997, outsprinting favourite Erik Hulzebosch at the finish.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elma de Vries</span> Dutch speed skater

Elma de Vries is a Dutch marathon speed skater and inline speed skater. She is the older sister of marathon speed skater Bob de Vries.

Erik Hulzebosch is a Dutch marathon speed skater, inline speed skater and part-time singer and blogger at his own website.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ted-Jan Bloemen</span> Dutch-Canadian speed skater

Ted-Jan Bloemen is a Dutch-Canadian long track speed skater. He started competing for the Canadian national speed skating team during the 2014–15 season, but prior to that he competed for the Netherlands in international competitions. Bloemen primarily competes in the long-distance events as well as the team pursuit event. He is a former world record holder for the 5,000 m (6:01.86), set in Salt Lake City, and the Olympic record holder for the 10,000 m (12:39.77), set winning gold at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang. Bloemen also won a silver medal in the 5,000 m at the Pyeongchang Olympics, the first Canadian male to medal in the distance since 1932. He has won a silver in 10,000 m and one bronze and silver in the team pursuit at the World Speed Skating Championships.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jan Bols</span> Dutch speed skater

Jan Bols is a former Dutch long track speed skater. Bols was among the top all-rounders in the late 60s and early 70s, this period overlapped the glory days of Kees Verkerk and Ard Schenk, so that he tends to be known as the third best Dutch skater of his time.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jan Blokhuijsen</span> Dutch speed skater

Jan Blokhuijsen is an Olympic award-winning Dutch long-track speed skater who until 2013 skated for the commercial TVM team.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Koen Verweij</span> Dutch speed skater

Koen Verweij is a Dutch speed skater and inline speed skater. At the end of the skating season 2008–09 he made a transfer from the Jong Oranje team of the national skating union to the commercial team of TVM.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bart Swings</span> Belgian speed skater

Bart Swings is a Belgian long track speed skater and inline speed skater. He is the 2022 Olympic champion on the speed skating mass start. Swings won Belgium's first gold medal in 74 years and is the first Belgian athlete ever to have won two medals in the Winter Olympics.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Douwe de Vries</span> Dutch speed skater

Douwe de Vries is a Dutch former professional marathon speed skater and long track speed skater. He resides in Heerenveen, Friesland. Douwe de Vries, who was a member of the commercial team of LottoNL-Jumbo, is the current holder of the team pursuit world record.

References