1913 World Allround Speed Skating Championships
International speed skating competition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
International speed skating competition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 1913 World Allround Speed Skating Championships took place at 1 and 2 March 1913 at the ice rink Pohjoissatama in Helsinki, Finland.
World Allround Speed Skating Championships | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Venue | Pohjoissatama, Helsinki, Finland | ||||||||||||
Dates | 1–2 March | ||||||||||||
Competitors | 15 from 5 nations | ||||||||||||
Medalist men | |||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
Oscar Mathisen was defending champion and succeeded in prolonging his title. Oscar Mathisen became World champion for the fourth time. He is the first ice-skater winning the World championship four times.
Place | Athlete | Country | Points | 500m | 5000m | 1500m | 10000m |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oscar Mathisen | Norway | 6 | 46.0 (1) | 8:56.1 (2) | 2:24.4 (1) | 18:04.9 (2) | |
Vasili Ippolitov | Russia | 15 | 50.1 (12) | 8:43.4 (1) | 2:26.3 (2) | 17:37.8 (1) | |
Nikita Naydenov | Russia | 20 | 49.5 (10) | 9:08.7 (4) | 2:29.3 (3) | 18:30.5 (4) | |
4 | Henning Olsen | Norway | 24 | 47.2 (2) | 9:27.8 (8) | 2:30.9 (6) | 19:16.6 (8) |
5 | Väinö Wickström | Finland | 24,5 | 48.9 (5) | 9:12.0 (5) | 2:31.6 (9) | 18:35.2 (5) |
6 | Platon Ippolitov | Russia | 28 | 51.0 (13) | 9:01.7 (3) | 2:32.6 (10) | 18:08.0 (3) |
7 | Petrus Axelson | Sweden | 30 | 49.9 (11) | 9:21.4 (6) | 2:31.4 (7) | 18:45.4 (7) |
8 | Gunnar Strömstén | Finland | 31 | 55.0 (15)* | 9:21.7 (7) | 2:30.2 (4) | 18:35.6 (6) |
9 | Bjarne Frang | Norway | 34 | 47.4 (3) | 9:44.7 (13) | 2:30.5 (5) | 19:47.0 (13) |
10 | Arvo Tuomainen | Finland | 36 | 49.0 (7) | 9:28.5 (9) | 2:33.3 (11) | 19:17.3 (9) |
11 | Martin Sæterhaug | Norway | 38 | 48.0 (4) | 9:36.2 (12) | 2:31.5 (8) | 19:48.2 (14) |
12 | Walter Tverin | Finland | 39,5 | 48.9 (5) | 9:35.4 (11) | 2:34.3 (12) | 19:24.7 (11) |
13 | Nikolay Rundyaltsev | Russia | 43 | 49.1 (8) | 9:29.7 (10) | 2:35.3 (13) | 19:36.4 (12) |
14 | Yevgeni Korolyov | Russia | 51 | 51.3 (14) | 9:53.2 (14) | 2:40.7 (14) | 19:18.2 (10) |
NC | Lauri Helanterä | Finland | - | 49.2 (9) | 9:56.5 (15) | NS | NS |
Source: SpeedSkatingStats.com[1]
Four distances have to be skated:
The ranking was made by award ranking points. The points were awarded to the skaters who had skated all the distances. The final ranking was then decided by ordering the skaters by lowest point totals.
One could win the World Championships also by winning at least three of the four distances, so the ranking could be affected by this.
Silver and bronze medals were awarded.
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.