2001–02 ISU Short Track Speed Skating World Cup

The 2002 Short Track Speed Skating World Cup was a multi-race tournament over a season for short track speed skating. The season began on 21 September and ended on 16 December 2001. The World Cup was organised by the ISU.

Men edit

Events edit

Date Place Discipline Winner 2nd place 3rd place
21-23 September 2001   Changchun 500 m   Li Jiajun   Takafumi Nishitani   Maurizio Carnino
1000 m   Kim Dong-Sung   Min Ryoung   Li Jiajun
1500 m   Kim Dong-Sung   Lee Seung-Jae   Li Jiajun
3000 m   Min Ryoung   Kim Dong-Sung   Fabio Carta
5000 m relay   South Korea   Japan   Italy
28-30 September 2001   Nobeyama 500 m   Li Jiajun   Takafumi Nishitani   Kim Dong-Sung
1000 m   Li Jiajun   Kim Dong-Sung   An Yulong
1500 m   Lee Seung-Jae   Kim Dong-Sung   Li Jiajun
3000 m   Kim Dong-Sung   Li Jiajun   Bruno Loscos
5000 m relay   South Korea   China   Japan
18-20 October 2001   Calgary 500 m   Kim Dong-Sung   Satoru Terao   Éric Bédard
1000 m   Apolo Anton Ohno   Kim Dong-Sung   Lee Seung-Jae
1500 m   Kim Dong-Sung   Marc Gagnon   Nicola Rodigari
3000 m   Kim Dong-Sung   Apolo Anton Ohno   Nicola Rodigari
5000 m relay   Japan   Canada
7-9 December 2001   Sofia 500 m   Kim Dong-Sung   Mathieu Turcotte   François-Louis Tremblay
1000 m   Kim Dong-Sung   Min Ryoung   Lee Seung-Jae
1500 m   Kim Dong-Sung   Fabio Carta   Nicola Rodigari
3000 m   Lee Seung-Jae   Kim Dong-Sung   Fabio Carta
5000 m relay   Canada   Italy   China
14-16 December 2001   Amsterdam 500 m   Éric Bédard   Li Jiajun
1000 m   Naoya Tamura   Lee Seung-Jae
1500 m   Kim Dong-Sung   Fabio Carta   Éric Bédard
3000 m   Nicola Rodigari   Lee Seung-Jae   Kim Dong-Sung
5000 m relay   South Korea   Italy   China
11–13 January 2002 European Championships in   Grenoble, France
13–23 February 2002 Winter Olympics in   Salt Lake City, United States
29–31 March 2002 World Team Championships in   Milwaukee, United States
5–7 April 2002 World Championships in   Montreal, Canada

World Cup Rankings edit

Overall

Rank Name Points
1   Kim Dong-Sung 99
2   Lee Seung-Jae 92
3   Li Jiajun 90
4   Min Ryoung 82
5   Fabio Carta 78
6   Satoru Terao 75
7   Feng Kai 73
8   An Yulong 65
9   Cees Juffermans 62
10   Takafumi Nishitani 61

500 m

Rank Name Points
1   Li Jiajun 95
2   Kim Dong-Sung 95
3   Takafumi Nishitani 89
4   Min Ryoung 72
5   Mathieu Turcotte 69
6   Satoru Terao 68
7   Fabio Carta 61
8   Lee Seung-Jae 61
9   An Yulong 60
10   Feng Kai 53

1000 m

Rank Name Points
1   Kim Dong-Sung 98
2   Min Ryoung 92
3   Lee Seung-Jae 92
4   Li Jiajun 91
5   An Yulong 68
6   Feng Kai 68
7   Nicola Rodigari 67
8   Satoru Terao 66
9   Fabio Carta 63
10   Mathieu Turcotte 57

1500 m

Rank Name Points
1   Kim Dong-Sung 100
2   Lee Seung-Jae 91
3   Li Jiajun 87
4   Fabio Carta 82
5   Feng Kai 76
6   Min Ryoung 76
7   Cees Juffermans 60
8   An Yulong 59
9   Bruno Loscos 57
10   Jonathan Guilmette 56

5000 m relay

Rank Name Points
1   South Korea 98
2   Japan 93
3   China 92
4   Italy 91
5   Great Britain 79
6   Belgium 79
7   Netherlands 76
8   Russia 66
9   France 63
10   Hungary 54

Women edit

Events edit

Date Place Discipline Winner 2nd place 3rd place
21-23 September 2001   Changchun 500 m   Yang Yang (A)   Evgenia Radanova   Yang Yang (S)
1000 m   Ko Gi-Hyun   Evgenia Radanova   Yang Yang (A)
1500 m   Ko Gi-Hyun   Choi Eun-Kyung   Evgenia Radanova
3000 m   Choi Eun-Kyung   Yang Yang (A)   Ko Gi-Hyun
5000 m relay   Japan   Bulgaria   China
28-30 September 2001   Nobeyama 500 m   Joo Min-Jin   Evgenia Radanova   Choi Min-Kyung
1000 m   Ko Gi-Hyun   Choi Min-Kyung   Evgenia Radanova
1500 m   Ko Gi-Hyun   Joo Min-Jin   Yang Yang (A)
3000 m   Ko Gi-Hyun   Joo Min-Jin   Chikage Tanaka
5000 m relay   South Korea   Japan   Bulgaria
18-20 October 2001   Calgary 500 m   Evgenia Radanova   Yang Yang (S)   Chikage Tanaka
1000 m   Yang Yang (A)   Ko Gi-Hyun   Sun Dandan
1500 m   Yang Yang (A)   Evgenia Radanova   Chikage Tanaka
3000 m   Ko Gi-Hyun   Yang Yang (A)   Chikage Tanaka
5000 m relay   South Korea   China   Italy
7-9 December 2001   Sofia 500 m   Yang Yang (A)   Yang Yang (S)   Wang Chunlu
1000 m   Choi Eun-Kyung   Yang Yang (A)   Park Hye-won
1500 m   Yang Yang (A)   Park Hye-won   Joo Min-Jin
3000 m   Choi Eun-Kyung   Yang Yang (S)   Joanna Williams
5000 m relay   China   Canada   South Korea
14-16 December 2001   Amsterdam 500 m   Yang Yang (S)   Yang Yang (A)   Wang Chunlu
1000 m   Yang Yang (S)   Yang Yang (A)   Choi Eun-Kyung
1500 m   Yang Yang (A)   Choi Eun-Kyung   Evgenia Radanova
3000 m   Park Hye-won   Yang Yang (A)   Choi Eun-Kyung
5000 m relay   China   South Korea   Canada
11–13 January 2002 European Championships in   Grenoble, France
13–23 February 2002 Winter Olympics in   Salt Lake City, United States
29–31 March 2002 World Team Championships in   Milwaukee, United States
5–7 April 2002 World Championships in   Montreal, Canada

World Cup Rankings edit

Overall

Rank Name Points
1   Yang Yang (A) 99
2   Evgenia Radanova 88
3   Yang Yang (S) 87
4   Joo Min-Jin 87
5   Chikage Tanaka 80
6   Ko Gi-Hyun 73
7   Choi Eun-Kyung 70
8   Joanna Williams 62
9   Mara Zini 62
10   Sarah Lindsay 62

500 m

Rank Name Points
1   Yang Yang (S) 96
2   Yang Yang (A) 95
3   Evgenia Radanova 90
4   Joo Min-Jin 90
5   Wang Chunlu 90
6   Chikage Tanaka 83
7   Marta Capurso 62
8   Sarah Lindsay 58
9   Choi Min-Kyung 55
10   Choi Eun-Kyung 48

1000 m

Rank Name Points
1   Yang Yang (A) 96
2   Yang Yang (S) 86
3   Sun Dandan 85
4   Evgenia Radanova 83
5   Joo Min-Jin 81
6   Chikage Tanaka 76
7   Ko Gi-Hyun 74
8   Choi Eun-Kyung 69
9   Yuka Kamino 60
10   Nina Evteeva 58

1500 m

Rank Name Points
1   Yang Yang (A) 98
2   Evgenia Radanova 90
3   Joo Min-Jin 89
4   Chikage Tanaka 83
5   Sun Dandan 83
6   Ko Gi-Hyun 70
7   Joanna Williams 64
8   Yang Yang (S) 63
9   Mara Zini 57
10   Sarah Lindsay 54

5000 m relay

Rank Name Points
1   China 100
2   South Korea 97
3   Japan 89
4   Italy 86
5   Bulgaria 84
6   Russia 80
7   Netherlands 77
8   Canada 69
9   Germany 55
10   United States 19

References edit