2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup

{{short description|International speed skating competition}}

{{Infobox Skating event

|event = ISU Speed Skating World Cup

|image =

|caption =

|venue =

|dates = 6 November 2009 – 14 March 2010

|competitors =

|nations =

|goldm =

|silverm =

|bronzem =

|goldmNation =

|silvermNation =

|bronzemNation =

|goldw =

|silverw =

|bronzew =

|goldwNation =

|silverwNation =

|bronzewNation =

|prev = 2008–09

|next = 2010–11

}}

{{2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup}}

The 2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup, officially the Essent ISU World Cup Speed Skating 2009–2010, was a series of international speed skating competitions which ran the entire season. The season started on 6 November 2009 in Berlin, Germany, and ended on 14 March 2010 in Heerenveen, Netherlands.[http://isu.sportcentric.net/db//files/serve.php?id=1502 World Cup Speed Skating 2009/2010] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120226231752/http://isu.sportcentric.net/db//files/serve.php?id=1502 |date=2012-02-26 }}, International Skating Union.[http://www.speedskatingstats.com/index.php?file=worldcup&wc=200910 World Cups of the 2009-10 season], SpeedSkatingStats.com. Compared to previous seasons, fewer competition weekends were held; the season was restricted due to the 2010 Winter Olympics, which were arranged in Vancouver, Canada, during February 2010. In total, seven competition weekends were held at six different locations, ten cups were contested (five for men, and five for women), and 70 races took place.

The World Cup is organized by the International Skating Union (ISU).

Calendar

class="wikitable" border="1" style="text-align:center"
{{nowrap|WC #}}

! City

! Venue

! Date

! {{nowrap|500 m}}

! {{nowrap|1000 m}}

! {{nowrap|1500 m}}

! {{nowrap|3000 m}}

! {{nowrap|5000 m}}

! {{nowrap|10000 m}}

! {{nowrap|Team pursuit}}

1

| align=left | Berlin

| align=left | Sportforum Hohenschönhausen

| align=right | {{nowrap|6–8 November}}

| 2m, 2w

| m, w

| m, w

| bgcolor=pink | w

| bgcolor=lightblue | m

|

|

2

| align=left | Heerenveen

| align=left | Thialf

| align=right | {{nowrap|13–15 November}}

| 2m, 2w

| m, w

| m, w

| bgcolor=pink | w

| bgcolor=lightblue | m

|

| m, w

3

| align=left | Hamar

| align=left | Vikingskipet

| align=right | {{nowrap|21–22 November}}

|

|

| m, w

|

| bgcolor=pink | w

| bgcolor=lightblue | m

|

4

| align=left | Calgary

| align=left | Olympic Oval

| align=right | {{nowrap|4–6 December}}

| 2m, 2w

| m, w

| m, w

| bgcolor=pink | w

| bgcolor=lightblue | m

|

| m, w

5

| align=left | {{nowrap|Salt Lake City}}

| align=left | Utah Olympic Oval

| align=right | {{nowrap|11–13 December}}

| 2m, 2w

| m, w

| m, w

| bgcolor=pink | w

| bgcolor=lightblue | m

|

| m, w

bgcolor=#faecc8

|

| align=left | Obihiro

| align=left | Meiji Hokkaido-Tokachi Oval

| align=right | {{nowrap|9–10 January}}

| colspan=7 | 2010 Asian Speed Skating Championships

bgcolor=#faecc8

|

| align=left | Hamar

| align=left | Vikingskipet

| align=right | {{nowrap|9–10 January}}

| colspan=7 | 2010 European Speed Skating Championships

bgcolor=#faecc8

|

| align=left | Obihiro

| align=left | Meiji Hokkaido-Tokachi Oval

| align=right | {{nowrap|16–17 January}}

| colspan=7 | 2010 World Sprint Speed Skating Championships

bgcolor=#faecc8

|

| align=left | Vancouver

| align=left | Richmond Olympic Oval

| align=right | {{nowrap|13–27 February}}

| colspan=7 | Speed skating at the 2010 Winter Olympics

6

| align=left | Erfurt

| align=left | Gunda-Niemann-Stirnemann-Halle

| align=right | {{nowrap|6–7 March}}

| 2m, 2w

| 2m, 2w

|

|

|

|

|

7

| align=left | Heerenveen

| align=left | Thialf

| align=right | {{nowrap|12–14 March}}

| 2m, 2w

| m, w

| m, w

| bgcolor=pink | w

| bgcolor=lightblue | m

|

| m, w

bgcolor=#faecc8

|

| align=left | Heerenveen

| align=left | Thialf

| align=right | {{nowrap|19–21 March}}

| colspan=7 | 2010 World Allround Speed Skating Championships

colspan=4 align=left | Total

! {{nowrap|12m, 12w}}

! {{nowrap|7m, 7w}}

! {{nowrap|6m, 6w}}

! 5w

! {{nowrap|5m, 1w}}

! 1m

! {{nowrap|4m, 4w}}

Note: the men's 5000 and 10000 metres were contested as one cup, and the women's 3000 and 5000 metres were contested as one cup, as indicated by the color coding.

World records

World records going into the 2009–10 season.

=Men=

class="wikitable" border="1" style="text-align:center"
Distance

! Time

! Nat.

! Holder

! Date

! Venue

! Reference

500 m

| 34.03

| {{flagicon|CAN}}

| align=left | Jeremy Wotherspoon

| align=right | 9 November 2007

| align=left | Utah Olympic Oval, Salt Lake City

| {{cite web

|url = http://www.speedskatingstats.com/index.php?file=records&g=m&event=500

|title = Evolution of the world record 500 meters Men

|last =

|first =

|date =

|work =

|publisher = www.speedskatingstats.com

|accessdate = 30 September 2013

}}

1000 m

| 1:06.42

| {{flagicon|USA}}

| align=left | Shani Davis

| align=right | 7 March 2009

| align=left | Utah Olympic Oval, Salt Lake City

| {{cite web

|url = http://www.speedskatingstats.com/index.php?file=records&g=m&event=1000

|title = Evolution of the world record 1000 meters Men

|last =

|first =

|date =

|work =

|publisher = www.speedskatingstats.com

|accessdate = 30 September 2013

}}

1500 m

| 1:41.80

| {{flagicon|USA}}

| align=left | Shani Davis

| align=right | 6 March 2009

| align=left | Utah Olympic Oval, Salt Lake City

| {{cite web

|url = http://www.speedskatingstats.com/index.php?file=records&g=m&event=1500

|title = Evolution of the world record 1500 meters Men

|last =

|first =

|date =

|work =

|publisher = www.speedskatingstats.com

|accessdate = 30 September 2013

}}

5000 m

| 6:03.32

| {{flagicon|NED}}

| align=left | Sven Kramer

| align=right | 17 November 2007

| align=left | Olympic Oval, Calgary

| {{cite web

|url = http://www.speedskatingstats.com/index.php?file=records&g=m&event=5000

|title = Evolution of the world record 5000 meters Men

|last =

|first =

|date =

|work =

|publisher = www.speedskatingstats.com

|accessdate = 30 September 2013

}}

10000 m

| 12:41.69

| {{flagicon|NED}}

| align=left | Sven Kramer

| align=right | 10 March 2007

| align=left | Utah Olympic Oval, Salt Lake City

| {{cite web

|url = http://www.speedskatingstats.com/index.php?file=records&g=m&event=10000

|title = Evolution of the world record 10,000 meters Men

|last =

|first =

|date =

|work =

|publisher = www.speedskatingstats.com

|accessdate = 30 September 2013

}}

Team pursuit
(8 laps)

| 3:37.80

| {{flagicon|NED}}

| align=left | Sven Kramer
Carl Verheijen
Erben Wennemars

| align=right | 11 March 2007

| align=left | Utah Olympic Oval, Salt Lake City

| {{cite web

|url = http://www.speedskatingstats.com/index.php?file=records&g=m&event=team

|title = Evolution of the world record Team pursuit Men

|last =

|first =

|date =

|work =

|publisher = www.speedskatingstats.com

|accessdate = 30 September 2013

}}

At the World Cup stop in Salt Lake City on 11 December 2009, Shani Davis of the United States set a new world record on the men's 1500 metres with a time of 1:41.04.

=Women=

class="wikitable" border="1" style="text-align:center"
Distance

! Time

! Nat.

! Holder

! Date

! Venue

! Reference

500 m

| 37.02

| {{flagicon|GER}}

| align=left | Jenny Wolf

| align=right | 16 November 2007

| align=left | Olympic Oval, Calgary

| {{cite web

|url = http://www.speedskatingstats.com/index.php?file=records&g=w&event=500

|title = Evolution of the world record 500 meters Women

|last =

|first =

|date =

|work =

|publisher = www.speedskatingstats.com

|accessdate = 30 September 2013

}}

1000 m

| 1:13.11

| {{flagicon|CAN}}

| align=left | Cindy Klassen

| align=right | 25 March 2006

| align=left | Olympic Oval, Calgary

| {{cite web

|url = http://www.speedskatingstats.com/index.php?file=records&g=w&event=1000

|title = Evolution of the world record 1000 meters Women

|last =

|first =

|date =

|work =

|publisher = www.speedskatingstats.com

|accessdate = 30 September 2013

}}

1500 m

| 1:51.79

| {{flagicon|CAN}}

| align=left | Cindy Klassen

| align=right | 20 November 2005

| align=left | Utah Olympic Oval, Salt Lake City

| {{cite web

|url = http://www.speedskatingstats.com/index.php?file=records&g=w&event=1500

|title = Evolution of the world record 1500 meters Women

|last =

|first =

|date =

|work =

|publisher = www.speedskatingstats.com

|accessdate = 30 September 2013

}}

3000 m

| 3:53.34

| {{flagicon|CAN}}

| align=left | Cindy Klassen

| align=right | 18 March 2006

| align=left | Olympic Oval, Calgary

| {{cite web

|url = http://www.speedskatingstats.com/index.php?file=records&g=w&event=3000

|title = Evolution of the world record 3000 meters Women

|last =

|first =

|date =

|work =

|publisher = www.speedskatingstats.com

|accessdate = 30 September 2013

}}

5000 m

| 6:45.61

| {{flagicon|CZE}}

| align=left | Martina Sáblíková

| align=right | 11 March 2007

| align=left | Utah Olympic Oval, Salt Lake City

| {{cite web

|url = http://www.speedskatingstats.com/index.php?file=records&g=w&event=5000

|title = Evolution of the world record 5000 meters Women

|last =

|first =

|date =

|work =

|publisher = www.speedskatingstats.com

|accessdate = 30 September 2013

}}

Team pursuit
(6 laps)

| 2:56.04

| {{flagicon|GER}}

| align=left | Daniela Anschütz-Thoms
Anni Friesinger
Claudia Pechstein

| align=right | 12 November 2005

| align=left | Olympic Oval, Calgary

| {{cite web

|url = http://www.speedskatingstats.com/index.php?file=records&g=w&event=team

|title = Evolution of the world record Team pursuit Women

|last =

|first =

|date =

|work =

|publisher = www.speedskatingstats.com

|accessdate = 30 September 2013

}}

At the World Cup stop in Calgary on 6 December 2009, the Canadian team – consisting of Kristina Groves, Christine Nesbitt and Brittany Schussler – set a new world record on the women's team pursuit with a time of 2:55.79.

At the World Cup stop in Salt Lake City on 11 December 2009, Jenny Wolf of Germany set a new world record on the women's 500 metres with a time of 37.00 seconds.

Men's standings

=500 m=

{{Main|2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Men's 500 metres}}

class="wikitable" border="1"

!width=30|Rank

!width=150|Name

!width=25|Points

align=center

| 1

align=left | {{flagicon|USA}} Tucker Fredricks788
align=center

| 2

align=left | {{flagicon|NED}} Jan Smeekens742
align=center

| 3

align=left | {{flagicon|FIN}} Mika Poutala702

=1000 m=

{{Main|2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Men's 1000 metres}}

class="wikitable" border="1"

!width=30|Rank

!width=150|Name

!width=25|Points

align=center

| 1

align=left | {{flagicon|USA}} Shani Davis750
align=center

| 2

align=left | {{flagicon|NED}} Mark Tuitert425
align=center

| 3

align=left | {{flagicon|NED}} Stefan Groothuis355

=1500 m=

{{Main|2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Men's 1500 metres}}

class="wikitable" border="1"

!width=30|Rank

!width=150|Name

!width=25|Points

align=center

| 1

align=left | {{flagicon|USA}} Shani Davis630
align=center

| 2

align=left | {{flagicon|NOR}} Håvard Bøkko395
align=center

| 3

align=left | {{flagicon|CAN}} Denny Morrison338

=5000 and 10000 m=

{{Main|2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Men's 5000 and 10000 metres}}

class="wikitable" border="1"

!width=30|Rank

!width=150|Name

!width=25|Points

align=center

| 1

align=left | {{flagicon|NOR}} Håvard Bøkko455
align=center

| 2

align=left | {{flagicon|RUS}} Ivan Skobrev430
align=center

| 3

align=left | {{flagicon|NED}} Bob de Jong416

=Team pursuit=

{{Main|2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Men's team pursuit}}

class="wikitable" border="1"

!width=30|Rank

!width=150|Name

!width=25|Points

align=center

| 1

align=left | {{flagicon|NOR}} Norway380
align=center

| 2

align=left | {{flagicon|NED}} Netherlands350
align=center

| 3

align=left | {{flagicon|CAN}} Canada306

Women's standings

=500 m=

{{Main|2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Women's 500 metres}}

class="wikitable" border="1"

!width=30|Rank

!width=150|Name

!width=25|Points

align=center

| 1

align=left | {{flagicon|GER}} Jenny Wolf1260
align=center

| 2

align=left | {{flagicon|NED}} Margot Boer700
align=center

| 3

align=left | {{flagicon|CHN}} Wang Beixing680

=1000 m=

{{Main|2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Women's 1000 metres}}

class="wikitable" border="1"

!width=30|Rank

! |Name

!width=25|Points

align=center

| 1

align=left | {{flagicon|CAN}} Christine Nesbitt472
align=center

| 2

align=left | {{flagicon|NED}} Margot Boer395
align=center

| 3

align=left | {{flagicon|GER}} Monique Angermüller351

=1500 m=

{{Main|2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Women's 1500 metres}}

class="wikitable" border="1"

!width=30|Rank

!width=150|Name

!width=25|Points

align=center

| 1

align=left | {{flagicon|CAN}} Kristina Groves560
align=center

| 2

align=left | {{flagicon|CAN}} Christine Nesbitt374
align=center

| 3

align=left | {{flagicon|CZE}} Martina Sáblíková348

=3000 and 5000 m=

{{Main|2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Women's 3000 and 5000 metres}}

class="wikitable" border="1"

!width=30|Rank

! |Name

!width=25|Points

align=center

| 1

align=left | {{flagicon|CZE}} Martina Sáblíková610
align=center

| 2

align=left | {{flagicon|GER}} Stephanie Beckert535
align=center

| 3

align=left | {{flagicon|GER}} Daniela Anschütz-Thoms435

=Team pursuit=

{{Main|2009–10 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Women's team pursuit}}

class="wikitable" border="1"

!width=30|Rank

!width=150|Name

!width=25|Points

align=center

| 1

align=left | {{flagicon|CAN}} Canada430
align=center

| 2

align=left | {{RUS}}320
align=center

| 3

align=left | {{GER}}310

References

{{reflist}}