2010–11 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Women's 1500 metres

The 1500 metres distance for women in the 2010–11 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over six races on six occasions, out of a total of eight World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 12–14 November 2010, and the final occasion also taking place in Heerenveen on 4–6 March 2011.[1]

The previous season's runner-up, Christine Nesbitt of Canada, won the cup, while Marrit Leenstra of the Netherlands came second, and Ireen Wüst, also of the Netherlands, came third. The defending champion, Kristina Groves of Canada, ended up in 22nd place.

Top three edit

Medal Athlete Points Previous season
Gold   Christine Nesbitt 575 2nd
Silver   Marrit Leenstra 466 41st
Bronze   Ireen Wüst 460 6th

Race medallists edit

Occasion # Location Date Gold Time Silver Time Bronze Time Report
1 Heerenveen, Netherlands 14 November Christine Nesbitt
  Canada
1:56.00 Ireen Wüst
  Netherlands
1:57.35 Marrit Leenstra
  Netherlands
1:57.68 [1]
2 Berlin, Germany 19 November Christine Nesbitt
  Canada
1:57.03 Ida Njåtun
  Norway
1:57.99 Ireen Wüst
  Netherlands
1:58.93 [2]
3 Hamar, Norway 28 November Christine Nesbitt
  Canada
1:58.00 Marrit Leenstra
  Netherlands
1:58.03 Brittany Schussler
  Canada
1:58.96 [3]
6 Moscow, Russia 29 January Christine Nesbitt
  Canada
1:56.80 Ireen Wüst
  Netherlands
1:56.93 Martina Sáblíková
  Czech Republic
1:57.50 [4]
7 Salt Lake City, United States 19 February Marrit Leenstra
  Netherlands
1:53.38 Ireen Wüst
  Netherlands
1:53.75 Christine Nesbitt
  Canada
1:54.16 [5]
8 Heerenveen, Netherlands 4 March Ireen Wüst
  Netherlands
1:56.35 Marrit Leenstra
  Netherlands
1:57.00 Christine Nesbitt
  Canada
1:57.86 [6]

Standings edit

Standings as of 6 March 2011 (end of the season).[2]

# Name Nat. HVN1 BER HAM MOS SLC HVN2 Total
1 Christine Nesbitt   100 100 100 100 70 105 575
2 Marrit Leenstra   70 36 80 60 100 120 466
3 Ireen Wüst   80 70 80 80 150 460
4 Brittany Schussler   50 50 70 45 36 14 265
5 Martina Sáblíková   40 36 70 6 75 227
6 Cindy Klassen   60 60 45 40 8 213
7 Ida Njåtun   19 80 28 21 16 21 185
8 Jilleanne Rookard   28 45 40 28 0 40 181
9 Diane Valkenburg   36 50 90 176
10 Yekaterina Lobysheva   14 16 50 32 45 18 175
11 Laurine van Riessen   45 8 60 18 28 169
12 Yekaterina Shikhova   14 32 40 21 45 152
13 Jorien Voorhuis   25 50 28 36 139
14 Heather Richardson   24 12 16 60 24 136
15 Hege Bøkko   8 19 14 24 32 97
16 Isabell Ost   21 6 18 10 14 12 81
17 Margot Boer   40 21 16 77
18 Miho Takagi   11 25 18 16 70
19 Yuliya Skokova   6 11 24 8 10 6 65
20 Ingeborg Kroon   36 5 21 62
21 Monique Angermüller   8 25 24 57
22 Kristina Groves   32 24 56
23 Shannon Rempel   18 18 12 8 56
24 Noh Seon-yeong   25 28 53
25 Lee Ju-yeon   16 32 48
26 Gabriele Hirschbichler   6 15 14 12 47
27 Jennifer Bay   12 6 6 6 15 45
28 Claudia Pechstein   25 10 35
29 Eriko Ishino   10 4 12 8 34
30 Nao Kodaira   32 32
31 Masako Hozumi   2 2 8 19 31
32 Ji Jia   15 10 0 25
33 Karolína Erbanová   0 0 19 5 24
34 Luiza Złotkowska   5 0 10 6 21
35 Ayaka Kikuchi   4 8 8 1 0 21
36 Yevgenia Dmitrieva   0 0 19 19
37 Natsumi Kado   6 11 17
38 Mari Hemmer   15 1 16
39 Alla Shabanova   15 15
40 Olga Graf   11 11
Linda de Vries   11 11
42 Anna Rokita   0 0 2 8 10
43 Kirsti Lay   6 4 10
44 Yuki Matsuda   4 1 5 10
45 Natalia Czerwonka   2 0 0 4 0 6
Katrin Mattscherodt   0 4 2 6
47 Wang Fei   3 0 3
48 Elena Sokhryakova   1 2 3
49 Ivanie Blondin   1 0 1

References edit

  1. ^ "2010/2011 ISU World Cup". Archived from the original on 2012-03-12. Retrieved 2010-11-14.
  2. ^ "Essent ISU WorldCup 2010/2011 (Rankings 1500m Women)". ISU. Retrieved 15 February 2011.