To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

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

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1500 metres distance for men 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]

Shani Davis of the United States successfully defended his title from the previous season, while Håvard Bøkko of Norway came second, improving on his third place from the previous season, and Denny Morrison of Canada came third.

On the fifth competition weekend, in Salt Lake City, Davis set a new world record of 1:41.04.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/5
    Views:
    56 677
    1 521
    3 463
    8 413
    14 417
  • Korean men sweep 1500m again - from Universal Sports
  • Rodriguez with world cup win
  • 07/08 Kobe World Cup Short track(men's 1000 B final)
  • 07/08 Kobe World cup Short track(men's 1500 A final)
  • 07/08 6th ISU World Cup Short track (1500m Final A)

Transcription

Top three

Medal Athlete Points Previous season
Gold United States Shani Davis 630 1st
Silver Norway Håvard Bøkko 395 3rd
Bronze Canada Denny Morrison 338 7th

Race medallists

Occasion # Location Date Gold Time Silver Time Bronze Time Report
1 Berlin, Germany 8 November Shani Davis
 United States
1:44.47 Håvard Bøkko
 Norway
1:45.56 Denny Morrison
 Canada
1:45.69 [2]
2 Heerenveen, Netherlands 13 November Shani Davis
 United States
1:44.48 Håvard Bøkko
 Norway
1:45.57 Stefan Groothuis
 Netherlands
1:45.74 [3]
3 Hamar, Norway 21 November Shani Davis
 United States
1:44.27 Lucas Makowsky
 Canada
1:45.40 Håvard Bøkko
 Norway
1:45.61 [4]
4 Calgary, Canada 4 December Chad Hedrick
 United States
1:42.14 Shani Davis
 United States
1:42.19 Denny Morrison
 Canada
1:42.74 [5]
5 Salt Lake City, United States 11 December Shani Davis
 United States
1:41.04
WR
Chad Hedrick
 United States
1:42.19 Mo Tae-bum
 South Korea
1:42.85 [6]
7 Heerenveen, Netherlands 12 March Shani Davis
 United States
1:45.20 Denny Morrison
 Canada
1:46.12 Kjeld Nuis
 Netherlands
1:46.61 [7]

Final standings

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

# Name Nat. BER HVN1 HAM CAL SLC HVN2 Total
1 Shani Davis United States 100 100 100 80 100 150 630
2 Håvard Bøkko Norway 80 80 70 60 60 45 395
3 Denny Morrison Canada 70 28 70 50 120 338
4 Mark Tuitert Netherlands 50 60 45 45 90 290
5 Chad Hedrick United States 28 0 60 100 80 268
6 Stefan Groothuis Netherlands 60 70 10 50 75 265
7 Lucas Makowsky Canada 18 36 80 28 36 32 230
8 Ivan Skobrev Russia 36 45 40 36 40 197
9 Rhian Ket Netherlands 40 50 14 32 28 164
10 Kjeld Nuis Netherlands 25 18 6 105 154
11 Trevor Marsicano United States 10 19 28 40 21 36 154
12 Enrico Fabris Italy 21 32 50 5 45 153
13 Yevgeny Lalenkov Russia 45 18 24 16 18 121
14 Konrad Niedźwiedzki Poland 24 12 21 21 28 12 118
15 Remco olde Heuvel Netherlands 16 40 36 24 116
16 Mo Tae-bum South Korea 12 8 25 70 115
17 Mikael Flygind-Larsen Norway 32 21 12 8 14 21 108
18 Mathieu Giroux Canada 14 24 32 14 8 14 106
19 Matteo Anesi Italy 15 16 18 12 24 10 95
20 Denis Kuzin Kazakhstan 19 14 8 6 40 87
21 Aleksey Yesin Russia 11 10 15 10 16 62
22 Brian Hansen United States 8 1 24 16 12 61
23 Robert Lehmann Germany 1 0 11 25 8 45
24 Joel Eriksson Sweden 0 6 16 4 18 44
25 Teruhiro Sugimori Japan 5 0 4 6 19 34
26 Erben Wennemars Netherlands 8 25 0 33
27 Sven Kramer Netherlands 32 32
28 Mun Jun South Korea 25 6 0 31
29 Steven Elm Canada 4 2 8 15 29
30 Jonathan Kuck United States 4 15 5 2 1 27
31 Alexis Contin France 0 15 10 25
32 Simon Kuipers Netherlands 19 19
33 Jeff Kitura Canada 19 19
34 Zbigniew Bródka Poland 0 6 11 0 17
Christoffer Fagerli Rukke Norway 6 11 0 0 17
36 Jörg Dallmann Germany 2 4 6 0 4 16
37 Samuel Schwarz Germany 11 11
38 Lee Jong-woo South Korea 0 8 0 2 10
39 Johan Röjler Sweden 8 1 9
40 Haralds Silovs Latvia 0 8 8
41 Aleksandr Lebedev Russia 2 0 0 6 8
42 Ha Hong-sun South Korea 6 0 0 0 6
43 Daniel Friberg Sweden 3 0 0 0 3
44 Takaharu Nakajima Japan 0 0 2 0 0 2
45 Sverre Haugli Norway 0 1 1
Jan Friesinger Germany 1 0 1

References

  1. ^ "2009/2010 ISU World Cup". Archived from the original on 2012-02-26. Retrieved 2009-11-03.
  2. ^ 2009-10 World Cup #1 - Results 1500 meters Men, SpeedSkatingStats.com.
  3. ^ 2009-10 World Cup #2 - Results 1500 meters Men, SpeedSkatingStats.com.
  4. ^ 2009-10 World Cup #3 - Results 1500 meters Men, SpeedSkatingStats.com.
  5. ^ 2009-10 World Cup #4 - Results 1500 meters Men, SpeedSkatingStats.com.
  6. ^ 2009-10 World Cup #5 - Results 1500 meters Men, SpeedSkatingStats.com.
  7. ^ 2009-10 World Cup #7 Final - Results 1500 meters Men, SpeedSkatingStats.com.
  8. ^ Standings men's 1500 metres
  9. ^ Classification of the 2009-10 World Cup 1500 meters Men, SpeedSkatingStats.com.
This page was last edited on 26 December 2022, at 18:18
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.