2006–07 ISU Speed Skating World Cup

ISU Speed Skating World Cup
Dates2006–2007
«2005–06 World Cup2007–08 World Cup»

The 2006–07 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was a multi-race tournament over a season of speed skating. The season began on 10 November 2006 and lasted until 4 March 2007. The World Cup was organised by the ISU, who also run world cups and championships in short track speed skating and figure skating.

Races

Men

Date Place Dist. Winner Time Second Time Third Time
November 10, 2006 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 500 m Japan Keiichiro Nagashima 35.10 South Korea Lee Kang-seok 35.25 South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk 35.31
Nagashima, 14th overall in the 2006 World Cup and 13th at the 2006 Olympics, won his first World Cup race after setting the winning time in the eighth of the 15 pairs. Two Koreans, with the defending World Cup champion Lee Kang-seok, followed.
November 10, 2006 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 1500 m Netherlands Erben Wennemars 1:45.96 United States Shani Davis 1:46.45 Netherlands Jan Bos 1:46.76
Wennemars, who had been disqualified from the 500 m, took the first win for the hosts. In the last pair, Shani Davis met Olympic champion Italian Enrico Fabris, and the two prevented the Dutch from finishing with the top four spots.
November 11, 2006 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 1000 m South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk 1:09.01 Netherlands Beorn Nijenhuis 1:09.21 Netherlands Erben Wennemars 1:09.37
Lee, 17th in the 2006 World Cup, won Korea's second victory in this Heerenveen weekend. After Lee had finished, five Dutchmen attacked his time, but failed to beat the Korean, though all finished in the top 13. Olympic champion Davis finished out of the podium, 0.01 of a second behind Wennemars.
November 11, 2006 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 5000 m Netherlands Sven Kramer 6:16.64 Netherlands Carl Verheijen 6:18.81 Norway Eskil Ervik 6:20.46
Kramer and Ervik in the 13th of the 15 pairs set the pace, taking first and second position in the race. Verheijen then skated alone in the 14th pair, as Olympic champion and defending long distance World Cup holder Chad Hedrick withdrew, and though he was never ahead of Kramer he passed Ervik's lap times on the penultimate lap and eventually finished second. In the last pair, neither Enrico Fabris nor Arne Dankers were ever ahead of third-place finisher Ervik.
November 12, 2006 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 500 m Japan Keiichiro Nagashima 35.24 South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk 35.31 Finland Pekka Koskela 35.40
American Tucker Fredricks set the pace in the 12th of 16 pairs, skating in 35.47 and taking a lead of 0.33 seconds. Three pairs later, Koskela bettered that time, beating Lee Kang-seok of Korea on the final stretch to finish 0.05 seconds ahead of his pairmate and 0.07 seconds ahead of Fredricks. However, Nagashima took his second World Cup win in three days, despite skating 0.14 seconds slower than in Friday's race, and pairmate Lee Kyou-hyuk couldn't quite catch up with the deficit he gave away in the opening 100 metres.
November 12, 2006 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 1000 m United States Shani Davis 1:09.17 South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk 1:09.26 Canada Denny Morrison 1:09.35
Morrison, who placed 11th in the first race, took the lead after pipping Yevgeniy Lalenkov by around a quarter of a second on the final lap. His time then stood until the second last pair, where Olympic champion Shani Davis came up with an even better finishing lap after having skated the first 600 metres at an identical pace. Davis' pairmate Nijenhuis, third in the first race, was ahead with a lap to go but finished 14th after a last lap almost two seconds worse than Davis due to an instability in one of the corners. In the final pair, Lee had eight tenths of a second on Davis before the final lap, but lost by 0.09 in goal.
November 17, 2006 Germany Berlin, Germany 500 m South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk 35.08 South Korea Lee Kang-seok 35.21 United States Tucker Fredricks 35.27
In the eighth pair, Lee Kyou-hyuk came up with the fastest time on the World Cup circuit this season, enough to secure his fifth career World Cup race win. Though he started slowly, a tenth behind pairmate Yu Fengtong, his last lap was ahead of any others, and no one else could hold on to their advantage. Fredricks placed on the podium for the first time in two seasons, but Keiichiro Nagashima of Japan held on to his overall World Cup lead after finishing fourth.
November 17, 2006 Germany Berlin, Germany 5000 m Netherlands Sven Kramer 6:09.76 Netherlands Carl Verheijen 6:16.49 Norway Eskil Ervik 6:17.32
Kramer's time was at the time the fourth fastest ever recorded on the distance, just under a second slower than his own world record from Utah Olympic Oval. All laps were completed below 30 seconds, and his victory was by far the largest in terms of samalog points thus far in the season. Like in Heerenveen, Verheijen sneaked past Ervik's times on the final lap, after being 0.27 seconds down after 4600 metres.
November 18, 2006 Germany Berlin, Germany 500 m Finland Pekka Koskela 35.02 South Korea Lee Kang-seok 35.05 South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk 35.07
Koskela's second World Cup victory, and his time was the fastest in the World Cup this season. The two Koreans faced each other in the last pair, but finished just behind Koskela's time. Lee Kyou-hyuk took over from Nagashima as leader of the overall standings on the 500 metres.
November 18, 2006 Germany Berlin, Germany 1500 m Italy Enrico Fabris 1:45.54 Netherlands Erben Wennemars 1:45.64 United States Shani Davis 1:45.98
Fabris and Wennemars faced off in the eighth pair, and Wennemars earned a lead of 1.43 seconds after 700 metres. However, Fabris cut the lead slightly on the third lap, before finishing with a final lap of 27.48 seconds to cross the line a tenth of a second before pairmate Wennemars. In the next two pairs, only Davis was within a second of Fabris and Wennemars, as he skated faster than Wennemars on the final lap, but couldn't quite catch up.
November 19, 2006 Germany Berlin, Germany 1000 m Netherlands Erben Wennemars 1:08.88 South Korea Mun Jun 1:09.33 South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk 1:09.40
Wennemars became the third winner on the 1000 metres thus far in the season, and by the largest margin. Mun Jun set a good time in the seventh of the ten pairs, while the winner of the second race in Heerenveen, Shani Davis, missed the podium by a hundredth of a second in the final pair.
November 19, 2006 Germany Berlin, Germany Team pursuit Netherlands Netherlands
Sven Kramer
Carl Verheijen
Erben Wennemars
3:40.79 Norway Norway
Håvard Bøkko
Henrik Christiansen
Eskil Ervik
3:45.97 Canada Canada
Arne Dankers
Steven Elm
Denny Morrison
3:46.31
The Dutch were just a second behind the world record, and had little competition; pairmates Norway were within a second after half the race, but eventually finished five seconds down. In the final pair, neither Canada nor Olympic champions Italy managed to beat the Norwegians' time.
November 25, 2006 Russia Moscow, Russia 1500 m Netherlands Erben Wennemars 1:46.85 Italy Enrico Fabris 1:47.30 Russia Ivan Skobrev 1:47.69
Six of the top ten skaters in the World Cup rankings did not take part in this race, but leaders Wennemars and Fabris placed themselves in the top two. Skobrev got his first World Cup podium place, and advanced to fifth in the overall standings, while Beorn Nijenhuis, who skated his first World Cup 1500 this season, finished fourth.
November 26, 2006 Russia Moscow, Russia 10,000 m Italy Enrico Fabris 13:14.94 Germany Tobias Schneider 13:16.36 Norway Øystein Grødum 13:17.88
In the absence of Kramer and Verheijen, the top two in the long distance World Cup rankings, Fabris won his first World Cup race on an event different from the 1500 metres. Third-ranked Eskil Ervik complained of back pains[1] and finished 11th out of 12 skaters in the A group, while in the B group 34-year-old marathon skater Kurt Wubben made his World Cup debut by skating faster than anyone in the A group.
December 2, 2006 China Harbin, PR China 500 m Finland Pekka Koskela 34.98 South Korea Lee Kang-seok 35.09 South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk 35.13
Koskela won his second 500 metres race of the season, the only skater to be able to finish under 35 seconds in a new track record. Lee Kyou-hyuk and Lee Kang-seok also finish on the podium, with Kyu-Hyuk holding the overall lead ten points ahead of Kang-Seok.
December 2, 2006 China Harbin, PR China 1000 m South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk 1:09.39 Netherlands Erben Wennemars 1:09.66 Netherlands Beorn Nijenhuis 1:09.98
Lee Kyou-hyuk took his ninth successive podium place on the 500 and 1000 metres of the season, and his second 1000 metres win of the season, though the winning time was the slowest of all races so far this year. With two top-six skaters missing in Davis and Morrison, Wennemars and Nijenhuis also finished underneath 1:10.00 in second and third position.
December 3, 2006 China Harbin, PR China 100 m Japan Yūya Oikawa 9.58 South Korea Lee Kang-seok 9.63 Finland Pekka Koskela 10.20
Yu Fengtong skated 9.60 in the first 100 metres of Saturday's 500 metres, which functioned as a qualifying race. Yu, however, did not start in the final, and Oikawa could defend his position as the fastest starting skater. Koskela was given his place in the three-man final heat due to fourth place in qualifying.
December 3, 2006 China Harbin, PR China 500 m Japan Keiichiro Nagashima
South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk
35.06 South Korea Lee Kang-seok 35.29
The first shared victory of the season enabled Nagashima to regain second place in the overall standings, while Lee Kang-seok remained third. Koskela, who had won two races in succession, finished sixth, 0.30 seconds off the pace.
December 3, 2006 China Harbin, PR China 1000 m South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk 1:09.17 Netherlands Erben Wennemars 1:09.38 Netherlands Stefan Groothuis
South Korea Mun Jun
1:09.63
Lee Kyou-hyuk completed the weekend with his third win in four races, ahead of four Dutch skaters, though Lee's compatriot Mun Jun squeezed in and split the Dutch contingent. All five Dutch participants finished in the top eight. Davis fell from third to sixth in the overall standings as a result of not competing, while Nijenhuis, who finished fifth in this race, was now third overall.
December 9, 2006 Japan Nagano, Japan 500 m Japan Keiichiro Nagashima 34.91 South Korea Lee Kang-seok 35.10 Finland Pekka Koskela 35.16
Nagashima's time of 34.91 was the fastest in the World Cup all season, and a new track record in the M-Wave arena. The win moved him ahead of Lee Kyou-hyuk in the overall standings; the Korean had his run of podium positions broken after skating 35.27 and finishing fourth.
December 9, 2006 Japan Nagano, Japan 1000 m Finland Pekka Koskela 1:09.41 South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk 1:09.47 Netherlands Erben Wennemars 1:09.73
Koskela's took his first A group victory on the 1000 metres; his best placing in the season thus far was sixth in Heerenveen and Harbin. Koskela was 0.15 seconds behind Lee and 0.02 seconds behind Wennemars after 600 metres, but his last lap brought him to the top of the podium. The winning time was the slowest so far this season, as the race took place without Davis and Morrison. Lee increased his overall standings lead over Wennemars to 70 points.
December 10, 2006 Japan Nagano, Japan 100 m Japan Yūya Oikawa 9.62 China Yu Fengtong 9.69 Finland Pekka Koskela 9.90
Yu skated 9.61 in the semi-final, but couldn't follow it up and was beaten by Oikawa, also the fastest over 100 metres in yesterday's 500.
December 10, 2006 Japan Nagano, Japan 500 m South Korea Lee Kang-seok 35.09 Japan Keiichiro Nagashima
Finland Pekka Koskela
35.13
Nagashima faced Koskela in the final pair, after Lee had beaten Tucker Fredricks' leading time by 0.11 seconds and World Cup number two Lee Kyou-hyuk had placed himself fourth with 35.40. Nagashima was 0.06 slower than Lee Kang-seok from the start, and despite a quicker top speed from both skaters, they crossed the line in the same time, 0.04 seconds behind Lee Kang-seok, who took his first World Cup win of the season.
December 10, 2006 Japan Nagano, Japan 1000 m Netherlands Jan Bos 1:09.40 South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk 1:09.62 Netherlands Erben Wennemars 1:09.76
Bos' first World Cup victory of the season brought him into third place of the overall standings, while Lee would go into 2007 as World Cup leader of the 1000 metres, extending his lead by a further ten points after defeating Erben Wennemars, despite losing 0.49 of a second on the final lap. Bos skated the fastest final lap of the weekend, in 26.72 seconds.
January 27, 2007 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 500 m Finland Pekka Koskela 35.26 United States Tucker Fredricks 35.31 Russia Dmitry Lobkov 35.46
The second World Cup weekend in Thialf was without the Asians, who competed in the Asian Winter Games in Changchun. Thus, Koskela's win, with the weakest winning time so far this season, was enough to take him to the top of the overall World Cup standings. Fredricks' third podium place of the season was a career-best second place, while Lobkov finished on the podium for the first time in two seasons.
January 27, 2007 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 1000 m United States Shani Davis 1:08.91 Netherlands Erben Wennemars 1:08.98 Netherlands Beorn Nijenhuis 1:09.07
Davis returned to the long track World Cup, having skipped the races in Asia, by equalling the track record with the second best time in the World Cup circuit this season. Wennemars, skating in the final pair, lost 0.21 seconds to Davis in the final lap, and despite skating the third-best time in the World Cup circuit he could only finish second, but drew level with the non-participating Lee Kyou-hyuk in the overall standings.
January 28, 2007 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 100 m Netherlands Jan Smeekens 9.84 Finland Mika Poutala 9.93 Poland Maciej Ustynowicz 10.26
Three of the top four skaters according to yesterday's qualifying time declined to participate, leaving the field open; Ustynowicz posted the best time of the nine invited to qualify for the final, but then failed in the actual race as Smeekens won his first World Cup victory; it was his first placing among the top five.
January 28, 2007 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 500 m United States Tucker Fredricks 35.27 Finland Pekka Koskela 35.29 United States Shani Davis 35.43
Davis competed in his first A group 500 metres of the season, having spent yesterday's race qualifying from the B group. In the second pair, he set a time unbeatable until Fredricks faced Koskela in the final pair of the day. Fredricks stretched his skate out to win by 0.02 seconds, his first World Cup victory, while Koskela's second place gives him a 105-point lead before the final two World Cup races in Calgary. The non-participating Oikawa wins the World Cup overall.
January 28, 2007 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 1000 m United States Shani Davis 1:08.98 Netherlands Erben Wennemars 1:09.19 Russia Yevgeny Lalenkov 1:09.55
In this race, Davis skated after Wennemars, and won his second race in a row despite once again trailing after 600 metres. With three World Cup victories, Davis and Lee Kyou-hyuk had thus won the most races; Wennemars had almost secured the World Cup overall, however, needing only a top-five finish in Calgary. Nijenhuis, yesterday's third-placed skater, does not start owing to an injury, and thus Lalenkov takes his first World Cup podium on the 1000 metres, and his first World Cup podium in any event since 2004.
February 3, 2007 Italy Turin, Italy 1500 m Italy Enrico Fabris 1:44.97 Netherlands Erben Wennemars 1:45.06 Canada Denny Morrison 1:46.07
The first and second in the overall standings faced off in the final pair, with the third-placed Morrison having taken a one-second lead in the ninth of the ten pairs. He was thus assured of retaining third place; however, Fabris and Wennemars remained in the lead in the overall standings, with Fabris catching up one second on the final lap to win the race by 0.09 seconds and led by virtue of one more victory before the race in Erfurt.
February 3, 2007 Italy Turin, Italy Team Canada Canada
Arne Dankers
Steven Elm
Denny Morrison
3:46.08 Russia Russia
Yevgeny Lalenkov
Ivan Skobrev
Alexey Yunin
3:47.86 Italy Italy
Matteo Anesi
Enrico Fabris
Luca Stefani
3:48.22
The first and second in the overall standings faced off in the final pair, with the third-placed Morrison having taken a one-second lead in the ninth of the ten pairs. He was thus assured of retaining third place; however, Fabris and Wennemars remained in the lead in the overall standings, with Fabris catching up one second on the final lap to win the race by 0.09 seconds and led by virtue of one more victory before the race in Erfurt.
February 4, 2007 Italy Turin, Italy 5000 m Netherlands Sven Kramer 6:18.31 Netherlands Carl Verheijen 6:18.52 Norway Eskil Ervik 6:25.69
Kramer's smallest victory margin this season; he opened a second faster than Verheijen in the first 200 metres, then gradually lost until it was 0.21 seconds in goal. Ervik finished third, but in an earlier pair Fabris skated the last 800 metres in 57.9 seconds, nearly two seconds faster than anyone else. He finished a few tenths of a second behind Ervik, however, and Verheijen thus advanced to second in the overall standings.
February 17, 2007 Germany Erfurt, Germany 10,000 m Netherlands Sven Kramer 12:53.17 Netherlands Carl Verheijen 13:03.76 Netherlands Brigt Rykkje 13:16.59
With the Norwegians in altitude training in Utah and Fabris skipping the distance to concentrate on the 1500 metres, the Dutch took the top three places on the podium. Kramer skated around the passing times of his new world record from the Heerenveen World Allround Championships for most of the race, but finished three seconds behind, still beating Verheijen's time by more than ten seconds and virtually securing the title. In the B group, Kurt Wubben also skated faster than anyone else.
February 18, 2007 Germany Erfurt, Germany 1500 m Italy Enrico Fabris 1:45.50 Netherlands Erben Wennemars 1:45.82 Netherlands Mark Tuitert 1:46.60
Fabris finished first ahead of two Dutchmen, giving him a 20-point lead over Wennemars before the World Cup final in Calgary. Once again Fabris trailed after 1100 metres, where he was behind all five Dutchmen, but the final lap of 27.5 was too strong for anyone. Tuitert made his first A group appearance after promoting from the B group in Torino with a second place there, and finished third. All five Dutchmen were among the top eight.
February 18, 2007 Germany Erfurt, Germany 1500 m Netherlands Netherlands
Sven Kramer
Wouter olde Heuvel
Carl Verheijen
3:46.61 Sweden Sweden
Joel Eriksson
Daniel Friberg
Johan Röjler
3:48.19 Japan Japan
Shingo Doi
Hiroki Hirako
Teruhiro Sugimori
3:49.21
World Cup leaders Canada left out Dankers and Morrison from their team, and promptly fell to seventh place, thus giving the Dutch team, which included long distance No. 1 and No. 2 Kramer and Verheijen, the chance to win the overall World Cup. Sweden and Japan gained their first podium places of the season, as well as team tickets for the World Single Distance Championships.
March 2, 2007 Canada Calgary, Canada 500 m United States Tucker Fredricks 34.64 Russia Dmitry Lobkov 34.71 Japan Joji Kato
Japan Keiichiro Nagashima
Finland Mika Poutala
34.72
March brought a changing of the guard on the 500 metres; of the top four in the World Cup, only Nagashima made the podium, while Poutala, ranked 27th in the overall standings, took his first podium place on an Olympic distance. World Cup leader Koskela finished eleventh, and five skaters were within distance of winning the cup. 12 skaters were within 0.30 seconds of the winner.
March 2, 2007 Canada Calgary, Canada 1000 m Canada Denny Morrison 1:07.24 United States Shani Davis 1:07.78 Russia Yevgeny Lalenkov 1:07.82
Despite finishing seventh, Wennemars won the World Cup overall, with Korean Lee Kyou-hyuk missing his chance by 0.10 seconds, though he led the race after 600 metres of the final pair. Morrison, who had not competed in the World Cup since November, returned to beat Olympic gold medallist and world record holder Davis by half a second, having the second fastest first 600 and the second fastest finish.
March 3, 2007 Canada Calgary, Canada 500 m Japan Yūya Oikawa 34.42 South Korea Lee Kang-seok 34.43 United States Tucker Fredricks 34.48
Oikawa's race was the eighth fastest 500 m ever recorded, Lee Kang Seok's the ninth fastest, in times significantly better than the previous day.[2] Oikawa did not have the fastest full lap, but a first 100 m of 9.41 helped him to victory, while Fredricks was second-fastest in 9.54. Nagashima and Fredricks faced off in the final pair for the World Cup title, with Fredricks needing to beat Nagashima by two places to take the title, and the 0.14 seconds was enough to win the Cup for the American.
March 3, 2007 Canada Calgary, Canada 5000 m Netherlands Sven Kramer 6:07.48 Netherlands Carl Verheijen 6:12.75 Italy Enrico Fabris 6:14.20
Kramer set the first world record of the World Cup season by beating Verheijen by five seconds in head-to-head racing, taking 1.5 seconds on Verheijen in the first 600 metres and gradually increasing the distance between the two. Kramer was ahead of his world record passing times throughout the race, with his smallest lead being 0.2 seconds. For the fifth time this season, Kramer finished first and Verheijen second, thus finishing first and second in the overall standings, and the distance top four was the same as the overall top four.
March 4, 2007 Canada Calgary, Canada 1500 m United States Shani Davis 1:42.32 Netherlands Erben Wennemars 1:43.24 Canada Denny Morrison 1:43.43
The second world record of the Calgary meet, with Davis beating Chad Hedrick's year-old record from Utah Olympic Oval by 0.46 seconds. Davis was faster than the world record on every lap, except for the last one, where he was 0.01 second slower with a lap of 27.68 seconds. The time stood for the last two pairs. In the final where Wennemars fought Enrico Fabris for the distance title, with both having 440 points before the race. Wennemars set a personal best by 0.27 seconds to beat Fabris by a second.
March 4, 2007 Canada Calgary, Canada 100 m Japan Yūya Oikawa 9.55 Japan Joji Kato 9.74 Poland Maciej Ustynowicz 9.83
Oikawa set the fastest time in all races, while Yu Fengtong, who finished second to Oikawa in the first qualifying heat, had to see that Kato and Ustynowicz skated slower than he did in the final heat without being able to get better than fourth place. Oikawa thus won the World Cup title, with three of four race victories.

Women

Date Place Dist. Winner Time Second Time Third Time
November 10, 2006 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 500 m South Korea Lee Sang-hwa 38.23 Germany Jenny Wolf 38.60 China Wang Beixing 38.70
The opening race of the World Cup season was won by a 17-year-old Korean, her first win in an Olympic distance. Her pairmate Jenny Wolf skated well enough to finish second, while 2005 World Single Distance silver medallist Wang Beixing took third.
November 10, 2006 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 1000 m Germany Anni Friesinger 1:15.89 Canada Christine Nesbitt 1:16.08 Netherlands Ireen Wüst 1:16.63
Friesinger, holder of two World Cups (1000 and 1500 metres), held on in the last pair despite losing 0.65 of a second to Nesbitt, who got her highest World Cup placing ever, on the final lap.
November 11, 2006 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 500 m China Wang Beixing 38.26 South Korea Lee Sang-hwa 38.33 Germany Jenny Wolf 38.41
Wang took her second career World Cup victory, setting a time of 38.26 in the penultimate pair which was just too strong for the Korean, whose opening 100 metres was 0.14 seconds worse than in the previous day's race. Lee defended her lead in the overall World Cup, however, and once again beat Wolf in a pair.
November 11, 2006 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 1500 m Germany Anni Friesinger 1:56.90 Canada Christine Nesbitt 1:56.95 Netherlands Ireen Wüst 1:57.31
The exact same podium as in yesterday's 1000 metres. Once again, Friesinger lost to Nesbitt on the final lap, though only 0.1 seconds this time. Wüst lost over a second to Nesbitt on the second and third laps.
November 12, 2006 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 1000 m Germany Anni Friesinger 1:15.93 Canada Christine Nesbitt 1:16.15 Netherlands Ireen Wüst 1:16.92
For the third time that weekend, the podium was made up of Friesinger, Nesbitt and Wüst in that order. All posted slightly weaker times than in Friday's race, though once more it was Nesbitt who had the best last lap. Wüst caught up 0.81 seconds on Marianne Timmer on the final lap to finish 0.05 seconds ahead.
November 12, 2006 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 3000 m Netherlands Renate Groenewold 4:05.45 Netherlands Ireen Wüst 4:06.56 Czech Republic Martina Sáblíková 4:06.89
Wüst, the Olympic champion on this distance, improved to second place as neither Nesbitt nor Friesinger took part on the 3000 metres; however, compatriot Renate Groenewold, who was pipped to the Olympic silver, beat her in the last pair. Wüst skated in pair with Sábliková, leading for almost the whole race, though she did lose 0.67 of a second on the final lap.
November 17, 2006 Germany Berlin, Germany 500 m Germany Jenny Wolf 37.77 South Korea Lee Sang-hwa 38.01 China Wang Beixing 38.11
2006 World Cup winner Wolf set the fastest time in the second-to-last pair, beating World Cup leader Lee Sang-hwa by 0.24 seconds after Lee had taken the lead by almost half a second and set a new fastest time for the World Cup this season. In the final pair, Wang Beixing skated to the third-best time, while fifth-ranked Hui Ren finished ninth after an opening time which only was better than two of 20 other skaters.
November 17, 2006 Germany Berlin, Germany 1500 m Germany Anni Friesinger 1:55.54 Netherlands Ireen Wüst 1:56.18 Canada Christine Nesbitt 1:56.77
The fourth Friesinger–Wüst–Nesbitt podium this season, though Nesbitt gave away a lead to Wüst on the final lap. Skating in the final pair, Nesbitt was half a second behind Friesinger before going up 2.7 seconds on the final lap to fall down to third place. Friesinger's win was her fourth this season, and her largest by samalog points.
November 18, 2006 Germany Berlin, Germany 500 m Germany Jenny Wolf 38.12 South Korea Lee Sang-hwa 38.18 China Wang Beixing 38.25
The same podium as the day before, though with worse times. Wolf took over the lead in the aggregate World Cup standings after her second race win in as many days. In the final pair, she was behind both Lee Sang-hwa and pairmate Aihua Xing after 100 metres, but caught up on the final lap to win by 0.06 seconds.
November 18, 2006 Germany Berlin, Germany 3000 m Netherlands Renate Groenewold 4:02.44 Canada Kristina Groves 4:03.04 Netherlands Ireen Wüst 4:04.01
Groenewold won the 3000 metres for the second time in as many weeks. Groves and Wüst, who skated together in the final pair, were ahead of Groenewold's passing times until the final lap. However, both finished with laps above 33 seconds, losing to Groenewold's final lap of 32.78.
November 19, 2006 Germany Berlin, Germany 1000 m Germany Anni Friesinger 1:15.53 Netherlands Ireen Wüst 1:16.13 Canada Christine Nesbitt 1:16.30
Friesinger won for the fifth time in five starts this season, and the time was her best on this distance this season. Wüst skated in the same pair as Nesbitt, beating her for the first time on the 1000 metres this season, after bettering her times from Heerenveen by over half a second. She trailed Nesbitt by two tenths of a second before the final lap, but her last lap of 29.30 seconds was the best of the afternoon, and also 0.7 seconds better than Friesinger.
November 19, 2006 Germany Berlin, Germany Team pursuit Netherlands Netherlands
Paulien van Deutekom
Renate Groenewold
Ireen Wüst
3:02.90 Canada Canada
Kristina Groves
Christine Nesbitt
Shannon Rempel
3:04.07 Germany Germany
Daniela Anschütz-Thoms
Lucille Opitz
Claudia Pechstein
3:04.76
Olympic champions Germany, without Friesinger, finished third as Wüst got her first win of the season, along with long distance World Cup leader Groenewold. The Dutch had set the benchmark in the second of the four pairs, and the Canadians – who trailed Germany at the halfway stage – could only complete the second half in the same speed as the Dutch, thus finishing 1.1 seconds down.
November 25, 2006 Russia Moscow, Russia 5000 m Germany Claudia Pechstein 7:04.95 Germany Daniela Anschütz-Thoms 7:05.36 Czech Republic Martina Sáblíková 7:06.01
2002 Olympic silver medallist Gretha Smit won the B group in a time of 7:01.25, faster than anyone in the A group. None of the top three skaters in the aggregate standings (Groenewold, Wüst, Groves) competed in the race. Anschütz-Thoms was within 0.01 seconds of Pechstein with 800 metres to go, but faded away; in the last pair Sábliková, the best ranked of the competing skaters, opened slowly and could not catch the two Germans.
November 26, 2006 Russia Moscow, Russia 1500 m Germany Anni Friesinger 1:56.40 Canada Christine Nesbitt1:58.04 Germany Daniela Anschütz-Thoms 1:59.77
Friesinger extended her run of victories to six, and in the absence of Wüst, Anschütz-Thoms made it into third place, though she was beaten by more than three seconds, the largest distance between first and third in the World Cup this season measured in samalog points.
December 2, 2006 China Harbin, PR China 500 m South Korea Lee Sang-hwa 38.23 Germany Jenny Wolf 38.30 China Wang Beixing 38.32
Lee Sang-hwa prevented Jenny Wolf from taking her third straight win at the 500 metres, pipping her by 0.07 seconds to overtake Wolf in the World Cup overall standings. She had a 10-point advantage before the second day's race.
December 2, 2006 China Harbin, PR China 1000 m Italy Chiara Simionato 1:16.99 Netherlands Marianne Timmer 1:17.63 China Wang Beixing 1:17.64
With all of the top four skaters in the World Cup rankings not competing, seventh-ranked Chiara Simionato made her first top-3 spot of the season a win. The time would not have been good enough for a podium place in any of the other World Cup races so far this season, though. She finished 0.64 in front of second placed Marianne Timmer who finished in 1:17.63, just 0.01 in front of Wang Beixing. Wang Fei missed out on the podium, a further 0.01 seconds back.
December 3, 2006 China Harbin, PR China 100 m China Xing Aihua 10.31 WR Germany Jenny Wolf 10.41 South Korea Lee Sang-hwa 10.59
Wolf was fastest on the opening 100 in Saturday's 500 metre race, but was beaten by Xing, whose 10.31 was tied with Svetlana Zhurova's three-year-old world record. Lee's time was beaten by Wang Beixing in the B final.
December 3, 2006 China Harbin, PR China 500 m Germany Jenny Wolf 38.41 South Korea Lee Sang-hwa 38.47 China Wang Beixing 38.59
Wolf was drawn against Lee in the final pair, and held on to her 100m advantage despite Lee's attack from the outer lane. In the second to last pair, Wang opened in identical time to Aihua Xing, but beat her by 0.16 seconds after the final curve.
December 3, 2006 China Harbin, PR China 1000 m Italy Chiara Simionato 1:17.14 Netherlands Marianne Timmer 1:17.65 Netherlands Annette Gerritsen 1:17.78
Though the gap was narrowed from yesterday's race, Simionato still won by 0.51 seconds, while Gerritsen got her first podium place in the A group. Simionato thus took over the overall World Cup lead from Anni Friesinger, despite the latter being unbeaten all season on any distance.
December 9, 2006 Japan Nagano, Japan 500 m South Korea Lee Sang-hwa 38.52 Germany Jenny Wolf 38.71 Netherlands Margot Boer 38.81
Lee and Wolf occupied the top two places for the fifth successive time this season, while the absence of Beixing Wang, five-time third-place finisher this season, opened a chance for others. Boer, who was ranked 13th overall before this race, skated the fastest last lap of the day with 27.94 (shared with Lee) to take her first career podium place.
December 9, 2006 Japan Nagano, Japan 1000 m Canada Shannon Rempel 1:16.88 Italy Chiara Simionato 1:17.23 Japan Nao Kodaira 1:17.53
Simionato, who won two World Cup victories in Harbin, extended her overall lead to 58 points despite being beaten by Rempel, who won her first World Cup race and was on the podium for the first time in two seasons. Simionato had to start alone in the final pair, as Ren Hui did not start.
December 10, 2006 Japan Nagano, Japan 100 m Germany Judith Hesse 10.51 South Korea Lee Sang-hwa 10.65 Russia Svetlana Kaykan 10.66
Hesse's first place in the top six of a World Cup race was a win; the time of 10.51 was only beaten in the semi-final by Lee Sang-hwa, and she was beaten in the final race. Lee takes over the lead in the overall World Cup, as the winner from Harbin, Xing Aihua, did not take part.
December 10, 2006 Japan Nagano, Japan 500 m South Korea Lee Sang-hwa 38.30 Germany Jenny Wolf 38.32 Japan Sayuri Yoshii 38.74
Lee takes Wolf from the last inner lane, winning by 0.02 seconds to extend her lead in the overall World Cup. Yoshii's best placing in this season's World Cup before this race was 11th, but after skating the third-fastest opening she takes third place.
December 10, 2006 Japan Nagano, Japan 1000 m Italy Chiara Simionato 1:17.14 Netherlands Marianne Timmer 1:17.33 Canada Shannon Rempel 1:17.69
Simionato back on top, as yesterday's winner Rempel was slower on the first 200 and the final lap. The positions in the race were identical to the positions in the overall World Cup standings; the undefeated Friesinger was now fourth.
January 27, 2007 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 500 m Germany Jenny Wolf 38.16 Russia Svetlana Kaykan 38.62 Netherlands Annette Gerritsen 38.99
Five of the top six in the World Cup did not participate; four Asians due to the Asian Winter Games and Timmer due to illness. Thus, Wolf took victory by the largest margin on the 500 metres thus far this season. Gerritsen finished on the podium for the first time this season, having sixth and eighth place as their best so far, while Kaykan went one better than at the World Sprint Championships for her first World Cup podium.
January 27, 2007 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 1000 m Canada Cindy Klassen 1:16.53 Germany Anni Friesinger 1:16.70 Italy Chiara Simionato 1:17.23
Klassen's first World Cup race this season ended in victory, with Friesinger recording a time more than 1.5 seconds poorer than at the World Sprints in Hamar a week before, thus losing a World Cup race for the first time this season. World Cup leader Simionato is best of the rest, but stretches her overall lead to 124 points.
January 28, 2007 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 100 m China Xing Aihua 10.31 Germany Judith Hesse 10.74 Japan Sayuri Yoshii 11.08
Germans Wolf and Hesse faced off in the final for the World Cup title, with fourth-placed Kaykan declining to start and first-placed Lee competing in China. Wolf won the race, and also set a personal best by skating the third-fastest time ever.
January 28, 2007 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 500 m Netherlands Annette Gerritsen 38.93 Italy Chiara Simionato 38.97 Netherlands Margot Boer 39.00
With no Kaykan and a fall from Wolf, Gerritsen wins her first World Cup race ever; before this weekend her best placing on the distance had been eighth. However, the time of 38.93 would only have been enough for a podium place in one of the nine previous World Cup races. Wolf's fall means Lee was trailing by 72 points before the two final races, meaning Wolf would have to make two second places to be assured of overall victory.
January 28, 2007 Netherlands Heerenveen, Netherlands 1000 m Germany Anni Friesinger 1:15.97 Canada Cindy Klassen 1:16.02 Netherlands Margot Boer 1:17.27
Friesinger and Klassen skated in the final pair, and were in a class of their own, Friesinger thus went 3–1 up in meets between the two skaters, though Klassen won the aggregate for the day. Simionato, who finished fourth, now required only a top-30 finish in the final race in Calgary to win, while Boer got her first 1000-meter podium.
February 3, 2007 Italy Turin, Italy 3000 m Czech Republic Martina Sáblíková 4:03.88 Netherlands Ireen Wüst 4:04.40 Canada Cindy Klassen 4:05.51
Sáblíková took over the lead in the distance standings with her first World Cup win of the season. Skating in the first pair against Olympic 5,000 metre gold medallist Clara Hughes, who also made a return to the World Cup, Klassen set a time of 4:05.51 despite finishing with a lap of 35 seconds, the second-worst of the day. It took until the ninth pair to beat it, when Wüst faced distance World Cup leader Anschütz-Thoms, and Wüst kept just ahead of Klassen for the entire race. Then, in the final pair, Sáblíková overtook Groenewold with two laps to go; Groenewold tired, while Sábliková's final 32.4 was more than half a second better than anyone else.
February 4, 2007 Italy Turin, Italy 1500 m Netherlands Ireen Wüst 1:55.01 Germany Anni Friesinger 1:56.16 Canada Cindy Klassen 1:56.38
Having skipped the 3000 metres, Friesinger made it 4–1 against Klassen, but was nevertheless distanced by almost a second by Wüst, whose 1500 was more than half a second better than Friesinger had made thus far this season. Wüst showed strength before the World Allround Championships at home in Heerenveen the following week, and advanced to third in the overall standings.
February 4, 2007 Italy Turin, Italy Team pursuit Russia Russia
Yekaterina Abramova
Galina Likhachova
Yekaterina Lobysheva
3:06.21 Canada Canada
Kristina Groves
Christine Nesbitt
Brittany Schussler
3:06.26 Netherlands Netherlands
Wieteke Cramer
Moniek Kleinsman
Jorien Voorhuis
3:07.36
None of the first four in the overall 1500 metre World Cup competed in this race, which was won by Russia for the first time after a quick opening, leading by one second over any competitors after three laps. The Netherlands team, who finished third after failing to keep up with Canada in the final two laps, remained in the lead in the overall World Cup.
February 17, 2007 Germany Erfurt, Germany 1500 m Germany Anni Friesinger 1:56.10 Netherlands Ireen Wüst 1:56.59 Canada Kristina Groves 1:57.13
After successive defeats to Wüst in Turin and at the World Allround, Friesinger responded by winning on home soil and taking an almost unassailable 150-point lead into the World Cup final in Canada. Friesinger skated in the last pair, and skated a race almost even with Friesinger, except for the last lap which went by in 31.59 seconds, the second-fastest of the day. Canadians Nesbitt and Klassen skipped the meet.
February 18, 2007 Germany Erfurt, Germany 5000 m Czech Republic Martina Sáblíková 6:50.39 Germany Claudia Pechstein 6:57.68 Germany Daniela Anschütz-Thoms 7:00.49
Sáblíková repeated her feat from the Heerenveen World Allround, winning by more than five seconds, though Pechstein was considerably closer than in Heerenveen. Pechstein skated in the last pair, but despite skating a flat race with no lap times above 33.5 she could not beat the 19-year-old Czech, who could win the distance World Cup with a fifth place or better in the final in Calgary.
February 18, 2007 Germany Erfurt, Germany Team Germany Germany
Daniela Anschütz-Thoms
Claudia Pechstein
Lucille Opitz
3:03.89 Russia Russia
Yekaterina Abramova
Galina Likhachova
Yekaterina Lobysheva
3:04.85 Netherlands Netherlands
Wieteke Cramer
Jorien Voorhuis
Ireen Wüst
3:07.23
Russia skated a second and a half better than in Turin, and led for five of the six laps; however, the German long-distance specialists went past on the final lap. The Dutch finished third, still without van Deutekom or Groenewold, but won the World Cup overall.
March 2, 2006 Canada Calgary, Canada 500 m China 37.61 Germany Jenny Wolf 37.72 Japan Sayuri Osuga 37.83
Wang, who had skipped several meets to win gold on this distance at the 2007 Asian Winter Games, now took her first victory at an ISU-organised event since November. Wolf won the World Cup for the second season running, as her only competitor Lee Sang-hwa finished seventh, while Osuga pipped Shihomi Shinya by 0.01 seconds for her first podium place since November 2005.
March 2, 2006 Canada Calgary, Canada 1000 m Netherlands Ireen Wüst 1:13.86 Canada Christine Nesbitt 1:14.42 Canada Kristina Groves 1:14.51
Wüst had competed in five ISU-organised 1000 metres this season, and finished on the podium behind Friesinger at all times. However, Friesinger was absent due to illness, and Wüst used the opportunity to skate the fourth-fastest all-time 1000 metre.[3] Four Canadians finished among the top six.
March 3, 2006 Canada Calgary, Canada 500 m China Wang Beixing 37.32 Japan Sayuri Osuga 37.66 Germany Jenny Wolf 37.71
Wang took her third win of the season, one fewer than Wolf and Lee, while Osuga and Wolf swapped places after Wolf skated a slower opening 100 metre than yesterday. After her two podium places, Osuga finished fourth in the distance rankings.
March 3, 2006 Canada Calgary, Canada 1500 m Netherlands Ireen Wüst 1:52.38 Canada Kristina Groves 1:53.58 Canada 1:53.80
As in the 1000 metres, it was Wüst ahead of the Canadians, as the World Allround Champion skated the third-fastest 1500 metre race of all time,[4] passing the absent Anni Friesinger on the all-time distance list and in the overall World Cup standings for the season. Wüst was fastest on all laps except the second.
March 4, 2006 Canada Calgary, Canada 3000 m Czech Republic Martina Sáblíková 3:57.04 Germany Daniela Anschütz-Thoms 3:58.59 Canada Kristina Groves 3:58.62
With two laps to go, Sáblíková was fifth, but as she was one of only two to skate the final lap below 32 seconds, she took the victory and the distance Cup title, as well as a runner-up place in the world all-time list to Cindy Klassen. Anschütz-Thoms needed to beat Groenewold and Pechstein to take second place in the overall standings, and did so despite trailing Groenewold for the first two thirds of their race.
March 4, 2006 Canada Calgary, Canada 100 m Germany Jenny Wolf 10.28 WR Japan Sayuri Osuga 10.46 South Korea Lee Sang-hwa 10.49
Wolf set a world record time in the final to win the World Cup title. Two Germans finished on top overall, with Judith Hesse winning the B final to finish second.

Men's overall results

100 m

Final standings after 4 of 4 races. Oikawa won despite missing the final race due to participation in the 2007 Asian Winter Games; Koskela opted out of the final race, though a place in the final would have won him the World Cup.[5]

Pos. Skater Har Nag Hee Cal Points
1. Japan Yūya Oikawa 100 100 150 350
2. Poland Maciej Ustynowicz 40 32 70 105 247
3. Finland Pekka Koskela 70 70 28 40 208
4. Japan Joji Kato 36 45 120 201
5. China Yu Fengtong 28 80 90 198
6. Japan Tadashi Obara 50 50 50 45 195
7. Finland Mika Poutala 13 20 80 75 188
8. Netherlands Jan Smeekens 17 22 100 139
9. China An Weijiang 60 60 120
10. Italy Ermanno Ioriatti 11 10 60 36 117
11. South Korea Lee Kang-seok 80 26 106
12. Canada Mike Ireland 13 40 22 75
13. Netherlands Gerard van Velde 11 13 45 69
14. United States Tucker Fredricks 24 18 26 68
15. Germany Anton Hahn 9 7 14 32 62

500 m

Final standings after 12 of 12 races. The top 15 skaters are listed, as well as those with a top-six placing in a race.[6]

Pos. Skater Heer 1 Heer 2 Ber 1 Ber 2 Harb 1 Harb 2 Nag 1 Nag 2 Heer 3 Heer 4 Cal 1 Cal 2 Points
1. United States Tucker Fredricks 32 50 70 60 50 40 28 60 80 100 150 105 825
2. Japan Keiichiro Nagashima 100 100 60 45 60 100 100 80 105 75 825
3. Finland Pekka Koskela 60 70 45 100 100 45 70 80 100 80 26 22 798
4. South Korea Lee Kang-seok 80 60 80 80 80 70 80 100 28 120 778
5. South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk 70 80 100 70 70 100 60 45 40 28 663
6. Russia Dmitry Lobkov 5 26 25 40 24 32 21 40 70 50 120 45 498
7. China Yu Fengtong 40 45 32 60 45 60 50 21 36 90 479
8. Japan Yūya Oikawa 50 32 18 36 40 28 40 24 22 150 440
9. Japan Joji Kato 36 36 50 28 28 21 50 36 105 45 435
10. Canada Mike Ireland 12 32 36 3 14 28 32 50 24 32 24 32 319
11. United States Kip Carpenter 14 20 21 4 16 36 18 32 50 40 32 17 300
12. Netherlands Jan Smeekens 45 18 40 21 18 18 14 12 40 32 6 36 300
13. Netherlands Erben Wennemars 40 18 24 32 16 12 16 60 36 17 271
14. Japan Tadashi Obara 20 24 6 18 36 14 40 8 14 60 8 22 270
15. Netherlands Gerard van Velde 20 18 24 14 10 8 8 10 36 45 18 15 226
16. Finland Mika Poutala 13 5 8 19 5 5 18 105 26 204
17. Canada Brock Miron 16 13 11 19 2 25 14 45 21 11 11 188
21. China Zhang Zhongqi 14 13 14 36 12 50 139
23. South Korea Mun Jun 25 12 16 45 22 120
28. United States Shani Davis 19 70 89

1000 m

Final standings after 10 of 10 races.[7]

Pos. Skater Heer 1 Heer 2 Ber 1 Harb 1 Harb 2 Nag 1 Nag 2 Heer 3 Heer 4 Cal 1 Points
1. Netherlands Erben Wennemars 70 60 100 80 80 70 70 80 80 40 730
2. South Korea Lee Kyou-hyuk 100 80 70 100 100 80 80 90 700
3. United States Shani Davis 60 100 60 100 100 120 540
4. Netherlands Jan Bos 50 40 45 40 45 60 100 36 50 36 502
5. Netherlands Stefan Groothuis 40 50 8 50 70 45 45 45 60 26 439
6. Netherlands Beorn Nijenhuis 80 20 36 70 50 21 21 70 28 396
7. Finland Pekka Koskela 45 26 28 45 40 100 60 24 16 384
8. South Korea Mun Jun 36 36 80 28 70 50 32 32 364
9. Canada François-Olivier Roberge 32 28 40 60 32 18 28 40 28 18 324
10. Russia Yevgeny Lalenkov 20 45 60 70 105 300
11. Canada Denny Morrison 26 70 50 150 296
12. United States Kip Carpenter 9 15 25 32 24 45 28 16 32 45 271
13. Russia Alexey Proshin 13 14 16 8 12 36 12 36 45 22 214
14. Russia Dmitry Lobkov 11 9 19 36 28 16 40 28 20 207
15. Canada Brock Miron 14 14 21 18 32 50 18 21 12 200
17. Norway Even Wetten 15 12 32 50 36 1 146
19. Netherlands Simon Kuipers 25 40 75 140

1500 m

Final standings after 6 of 6 races.[8]

Pos. Skater Heer Ber Mosc Tur Erf Cal Points
1. Netherlands Erben Wennemars 100 80 100 80 80 120 560
2. Italy Enrico Fabris 60 100 80 100 100 36 476
3. Canada Denny Morrison 40 45 45 70 105 305
4. United States Shani Davis 80 70 150 300
5. Russia Yevgeniy Lalenkov 26 50 21 60 60 26 243
6. Netherlands Jan Bos 70 18 50 50 28 216
7. Netherlands Simon Kuipers 50 8 45 90 193
8. Canada Steven Elm 20 21 24 24 28 22 139
9. Netherlands Stefan Groothuis 25 36 75 136
10. South Korea Mun Jun 36 60 40 136
11. Netherlands Mark Tuitert 19 70 45 134
12. Germany Tobias Schneider 20 28 18 36 16 118
13. Poland Konrad Niedźwiedzki 18 32 28 21 13 112
14. Canada François-Olivier Roberge 22 16 40 5 24 107
15. Netherlands Beorn Nijenhuis 60 45 105
16. Russia Ivan Skobrev 28 5 70 103
17. Germany Stefan Heythausen 7 50 14 16 11 98
22. Netherlands Sven Kramer 45 40 85

5000/10000 m

Final standings after 6 of 6 races.[9]

Pos. Skater Heer Ber Mosc 10k Tur Erf 10k Cal Points
1. Netherlands Sven Kramer 100 100 100 100 100 500
2. Netherlands Carl Verheijen 80 80 80 80 80 400
3. Italy Enrico Fabris 45 60 100 60 70 335
4. Norway Eskil Ervik 70 70 20 70 60 290
5. Netherlands Bob de Jong 50 50 60 24 45 36 265
6. Norway Øystein Grødum 26 40 70 40 60 20 256
7. Germany Tobias Schneider 40 32 80 45 20 14 231
8. Canada Arne Dankers 32 36 35 50 50 203
9. Netherlands Brigt Rykkje 20 16 50 12 70 32 200
10. Norway Håvard Bøkko 60 28 30 45 163
11. Norway Odd Borgersen 22 18 45 8 50 4 147
12. Japan Hiroki Hirako 17 24 25 21 35 16 138
13. Germany Marco Weber 8 15 21 10 40 24 118
14. Sweden Johan Röjler 16 12 8 28 25 18 107
15. United States Shani Davis 36 45 22 103

Team pursuit

Final standings after 3 of 3 races.[10]

Pos. Team Skaters used Ber Tur Erf Points
1. Netherlands Netherlands Kramer, R. olde Heuvel, W. olde Heuvel, Ritsma, Prinsen, Verheijen, Wennemars 100 36 100 236
2. Canada Canada Dankers, Elm, Morrison, Warsylewicz, Makowsky 70 100 40 210
3. Germany Germany Heythausen, Lehmann, Schneider, Weber 50 60 60 170
4. Italy Italy Anesi, Donagrandi, Fabris, Stefani 45 70 50 165
5. Sweden Sweden Eriksson, Friberg, Röjler 40 40 80 160
6. Japan Japan Dejima, Doi, Hirako, Otoge, Sugimori 60 28 70 158
7. Russia Russia Belousov, Lalenkov, Shepel, Skobrev, Yunin 32 80 45 157
8. Norway Norway Bøkko, Christiansen, Ervik, Haugli, Johansen, Rukke, van der Horst 80 45 21 146
9. United States United States Dyrud, Hedrick, Leveille, Stewart, Loquai 36 50 28 114
10. Poland Poland Chmura, Druszkiewicz, Kustra, Mazur, Niedźwiedzki 28 32 36 96
11. Belarus Belarus Smirnov, Mikhailov, Vysotski 16 24 40
12. France France Loy, Contin, Briand 32 32
13. China China Yue, Xuefeng, Xin 24 24
14. Kazakhstan Kazakhstan Babenko, Kostin, Zhigin 21 21
15. Romania Romania Grozea, Ionescu, Pop 18 18
16. Czech Republic Czech Republic Haselberger, Kulma, Sáblík 14 14

Women's overall results

100 m

Final standings after 4 of 4 races.[11]

Pos. Skater Har Nag Hee Cal Points
1. Germany Jenny Wolf 80 60 100 150 390
2. Germany Judith Hesse 40 100 80 90 310
3. South Korea Lee Sang-hwa 70 80 105 255
4. Japan Sayuri Osuga 50 50 120 220
5. Russia Svetlana Kaykan 32 70 28 75 205
6. Netherlands Annette Gerritsen 36 36 60 132
7. Italy Chiara Simionato 10 32 45 45 132
8. Japan Sayuri Yoshii 14 45 70 129
9. China Xing Aihua 100 100
10. Sweden Paulina Wallin 50 40 90
11. Canada Kim Weger 16 18 40 74
12. China Zhang Shuang 21 40 61
13. China Wang Beixing 60 60
14. Japan Tomomi Okazaki 28 24 52
15. Canada Krisy Myers 3 8 36 47

500 m

Final standings after 12 races. The top 15 skaters are listed, as well as those with a top-six placing in a race.[12]

Pos. Skater Heer 1 Heer 2 Ber 1 Ber 2 Harb 1 Harb 2 Nag 1 Nag 2 Heer 3 Heer 4 Cal 1 Cal 2 Points
1. Germany Jenny Wolf 80 70 100 100 80 100 80 80 100 2 120 105 1017
2. South Korea Lee Sang-hwa 100 80 80 80 100 80 100 100 40 75 835
3. China Wang Beixing 70 100 70 70 70 70 150 150 750
4. Japan Sayuri Osuga 32 45 45 50 40 50 50 60 105 120 597
5. Netherlands Annette Gerritsen 28 36 24 16 21 21 16 24 70 100 75 36 467
6. Italy Chiara Simionato 20 28 36 32 24 28 36 50 50 80 18 32 434
7. China Xing Aihua 60 60 60 45 60 60 36 40 421
8. Netherlands Margot Boer 50 40 28 6 5 70 36 60 70 16 24 405
9. Russia Svetlana Kaykan 13 22 21 8 36 36 36 45 80 45 28 370
10. China Ren Hui 45 50 32 60 45 24 45 22 18 341
11. Japan Sayuri Yoshii 24 18 21 18 10 14 24 70 45 21 28 26 319
12. Japan Nao Kodaira 26 17 14 10 14 16 60 28 28 50 17 16 296
13. Canada Shannon Rempel 18 20 6 28 18 10 40 21 40 28 24 20 273
14. Netherlands Marianne Timmer 40 36 50 28 16 40 21 40 271
15. Japan Tomomi Okazaki 15 26 12 21 32 45 14 18 26 45 254
18. Germany Pamela Zöllner 22 24 8 14 3 32 50 14 17 204
19. Japan Shihomi Shinya 90 90 180
20. United States Elli Ochowicz 15 13 19 5 36 60 10 7 165
22. China Shang Zhuang 50 18 28 36 132

1000 m

Final standings after 10 races.[13]

Many skaters skipped the races in Harbin and Nagano, where nearly 40% of the available points were up for grabs. The overall World Cup winner, Chiara Simionato, was defeated by Anni Friesinger, Ireen Wüst, Christine Nesbitt or Cindy Klassen in all races in which the four took part. Friesinger won four of her five races during the season, taking the most wins.

Pos. Skater Heer 1 Heer 2 Ber 1 Harb 1 Harb 2 Nag 1 Nag 2 Heer 3 Heer 4 Cal 1 Points
1. Italy Chiara Simionato 60 26 36 100 100 80 100 70 60 40 672
2. Canada Shannon Rempel 45 28 50 50 60 100 70 45 36 45 529
3. Germany Anni Friesinger 100 100 100 80 100 480
4. Netherlands Marianne Timmer 40 60 24 80 80 60 80 424
5. Netherlands Annette Gerritsen 26 24 40 45 70 36 28 50 50 32 401
6. Netherlands Ireen Wüst 70 70 80 150 370
7. Canada Christine Nesbitt 80 80 70 120 350
8. Japan Sayuri Yoshii 17 15 18 18 32 40 60 18 18 36 272
9. Canada Kristina Groves 50 50 60 105 265
10. Japan Nao Kodaira 16 18 21 36 36 70 40 5 12 10 264
11. Canada Cindy Klassen 100 80 75 255
12. Netherlands Margot Boer 28 40 32 12 60 70 12 254
13. South Korea Lee Sang-hwa 36 20 28 40 32 50 32 9 247
14. China Wang Beixing 32 45 45 70 40 232
15. China Wang Fei 25 60 50 90 225
17. Russia Svetlana Kaykan 14 5 14 18 24 45 32 13 165
18. China Ren Hui 24 36 14 16 45 0 14 149
19. Japan Maki Tabata 22 8 45 50 17 142
20. Canada Brittany Schussler 9 13 15 36 45 18 136

1500 m

Final standings after 6 races.[14]

Due to winning the final race, Wüst finished ahead of Friesinger, though Friesinger accumulated four wins to Wüst's two during the season.

Pos. Skater Heer Ber Mosc Tur Erf Cal Points
1. Netherlands Ireen Wüst 70 80 100 80 150 480
2. Germany Anni Friesinger 100 100 100 80 100 480
3. Canada Kristina Groves 60 60 60 70 120 370
4. Canada Christine Nesbitt 80 70 80 50 36 316
5. Germany Daniela Anschütz-Thoms 50 28 70 36 50 32 266
6. Netherlands Paulien van Deutekom 45 50 45 32 45 217
7. Czech Republic Martina Sáblíková 20 8 24 21 60 75 208
8. Canada Cindy Klassen 70 105 175
9. China Wang Fei 36 40 90 166
10. Poland Katarzyna Wójcicka 28 16 60 28 21 9 162
11. Japan Maki Tabata 26 24 40 28 40 158
12. Netherlands Marja Vis 25 40 45 24 134
13. Germany Claudia Pechstein 32 45 32 109
14. Netherlands Jorien Voorhuis 11 25 40 22 98
15. Canada Shannon Rempel 24 45 28 97
16. Russia Yekaterina Abramova 16 18 50 12 96

3000/5000 m

Final standings after 6 races.[15]

Pos. Skater Heer Ber Mosc 5k Tur Erf 5k Cal Points
1. Czech Republic Martina Sáblíková 70 50 70 100 100 150 540
2. Germany Daniela Anschütz-Thoms 60 60 80 36 70 120 426
3. Germany Claudia Pechstein 36 36 100 60 80 90 402
4. Netherlands Renate Groenewold 100 100 50 60 45 355
5. Canada Kristina Groves 50 80 40 45 105 320
6. Netherlands Ireen Wüst 80 70 80 230
7. Netherlands Marja Vis 32 40 60 21 50 20 223
8. United States Catherine Raney 45 16 50 28 25 18 182
9. Netherlands Paulien van Deutekom 28 45 32 75 180
10. Norway Maren Haugli 45 28 30 18 26 147
11. Japan Maki Tabata 14 25 35 30 32 136
12. Russia Svetlana Vysokova 15 19 25 5 40 15 119
13. Poland Katarzyna Wójcicka 22 24 20 24 15 9 114
14. Canada Cindy Klassen 70 40 110
15. Netherlands Gretha Smit 35 14 30 24 103
21. Germany Stephanie Beckert 20 14 45 79
23. Canada Clara Hughes 45 28 73

Team pursuit

Final standings after 3 races.[16]

Pos. Team Skaters used Ber Tur Erf Points
1. Netherlands Netherlands Cramer, Van Deutekom, Groenewold, Kleinsman, Voorhuis, Wüst 100 70 70 240
2. Russia Russia Abramova Likhachova, Lobysheva, Vysokova 50 100 80 230
3. Germany Germany Anschütz-Thoms, Mattscherodt, Opitz, Pechstein, Zillmann 70 50 100 220
4. Canada Canada D'Amours, Groves, Nesbitt, Rempel, Schussler, Sibold 80 80 50 210
5. Japan Japan Hozumi, Ishino, Otsu, Tabata 60 60 60 180
6. Poland Poland Danaj, Ksyt, Zlotkowska 36 45 45 126
7. Romania Romania Dumitru, Lazarescu, Oltean, Opincariu 40 40 80
8. China China Gao, Ji, Zhang 45 45

References

  1. Ryggen ødela for Ervik, from NRK, retrieved 26 November 2006
  2. All Time best performances as of 06-07-01 Archived March 10, 2007, at the Wayback Machine., Evert Stenlund, accessed 9 March 2007
  3. Evolution of the 1000 m distance, Evert Stenlund, retrieved 4 April 2007
  4. Evolution of the 1500 m distance, Evert Stenlund, retrieved 4 April 2007
  5. "Classification of the 2006-07 World Cup 100 meters Men". SpeedSkatingStats.com. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  6. "Classification of the 2006-07 World Cup 500 meters Men". SpeedSkatingStats.com. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  7. "Classification of the 2006-07 World Cup 1000 meters Men". SpeedSkatingStats.com. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  8. "Classification of the 2006-07 World Cup 1500 meters Men". SpeedSkatingStats.com. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  9. "Classification of the 2006-07 World Cup 5000 & 10,000 meters Men". SpeedSkatingStats.com. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  10. "Classification of the 2006-07 World Cup Team pursuit Men". SpeedSkatingStats.com. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  11. "Classification of the 2006-07 World Cup 100 meters Women". SpeedSkatingStats.com. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  12. "Classification of the 2006-07 World Cup 500 meters Women". SpeedSkatingStats.com. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  13. "Classification of the 2006-07 World Cup 1000 meters Women". SpeedSkatingStats.com. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  14. "Classification of the 2006-07 World Cup 1500 meters Women". SpeedSkatingStats.com. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  15. "Classification of the 2006-07 World Cup 3000 & 5000 meters Women". SpeedSkatingStats.com. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
  16. "Classification of the 2006-07 World Cup Team Pursuit Women". SpeedSkatingStats.com. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
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