2013–14 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Men's 5000 and 10000 metres

The 5000 and 10000 meters distances for men in the 2013–14 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over six races on six occasions, out of a total of six World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, on 8–10 November 2013, and the final occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 14–16 March 2014.[1] Five of the races were over 5000 metres, and one race was over 10000 metres.[1]

Jorrit Bergsma of the Netherlands successfully defended his title from the previous season, while Patrick Beckert of Germany came second, and Sven Kramer of the Netherlands came third.

Top three

Position Athlete Points Previous season
1 Netherlands Jorrit Bergsma 500 1st
2 Germany Patrick Beckert 311 11th
3 Netherlands Sven Kramer 300 3rd

Race medallists

Occasion # Location Date Distance Gold Time Silver Time Bronze Time Report
1 Calgary, Alberta, Canada 10 November 5000 metres Sven Kramer
 Netherlands
6:04.46 Jorrit Bergsma
 Netherlands
6:06.93 Lee Seung-hoon
 South Korea
6:07.04 [2]
2 Salt Lake City, United States 17 November 5000 metres Sven Kramer
 Netherlands
6:04.59 Bob de Jong
 Netherlands
6:07.43 Jorrit Bergsma
 Netherlands
6:08.13 [3]
3 Astana, Kazakhstan 1 December 10000 metres Sven Kramer
 Netherlands
13:02.38 Alexis Contin
 France
13:14.64 Patrick Beckert
 Germany
13:18.73 [4]
4 Berlin, Germany 8 December 5000 metres Jorrit Bergsma
 Netherlands
6:14.82 Jan Blokhuijsen
 Netherlands
6:15.66 Lee Seung-hoon
 South Korea
6:16.12 [5]
5 Inzell, Germany 7 March 5000 metres Jorrit Bergsma
 Netherlands
6:14.08 Sverre Lunde Pedersen
 Norway
6:19.48 Patrick Beckert
 Germany
6:22.71 [6]
6 Heerenveen, Netherlands 16 March 5000 metres Jorrit Bergsma
 Netherlands
6:13.80 Jan Blokhuijsen
 Netherlands
6:19.03 Aleksandr Rumyantsev
 Russia
6:25.06 [7]

Standings

Standings as of 16 March 2014 (end of the season).[8]

# Name Nat. CAL SLC AST BER INZ HVN Total
1 Jorrit Bergsma Netherlands 80 70 100 100 150 500
2 Patrick Beckert Germany 30 21 70 30 70 90 311
3 Sven Kramer Netherlands 100 100 100 300
4 Sverre Lunde Pedersen Norway 35 45 25 40 80 40 265
5 Jan Blokhuijsen Netherlands 45 18 80 120 263
6 Douwe de Vries Netherlands 27 32 50 60 75 244
7 Lee Seung-hoon South Korea 70 40 50 70 230
8 Aleksandr Rumyantsev Russia 7 19 15 27 40 105 213
9 Bob de Jong Netherlands 60 80 21 45 206
10 Bart Swings Belgium 25 25 60 60 28 198
11 Alexis Contin France 27 30 80 25 162
12 Jonathan Kuck United States 32 50 45 35 162
13 Moritz Geisreiter Germany 40 16 35 18 14 21 144
14 Håvard Bøkko Norway 18 14 40 25 45 142
15 Ivan Skobrev Russia 23 60 45 128
16 Dmitry Babenko Kazakhstan 16 12 11 32 21 36 128
17 Denis Yuskov Russia 21 35 16 50 122
18 Danil Sinitsyn Russia 5 32 30 12 16 24 119
19 Yevgeny Seryaev Russia 9 7 9 15 35 75
20 Shane Dobbin New Zealand 15 23 21 14 73
21 Frank Vreugdenhil Netherlands 32 32 64
22 Alexej Baumgärtner Germany 12 11 19 10 12 64
23 Rob Hadders Netherlands 23 35 58
24 Koen Verweij Netherlands 50 50
25 Jan Szymański Poland 6 6 19 10 41
26 Andrea Giovannini Italy 1 3 3 27 34
27 Brian Hansen United States 19 10 29
28 Marco Weber Germany 18 11 29
29 Emery Lehman United States 11 15 2 28
30 Bob de Vries Netherlands 27 27
31 Fredrik van der Horst Norway 4 23 27
32 Patrick Meek United States 2 7 18 27
33 Robert Bovenhuis Netherlands 23 23
34 Robert Lehmann Germany 14 9 23
35 Sergey Gryaztsov Russia 19 19
36 Ewen Fernandez France 4 9 6 19
37 Piotr Puszkarski Poland 15 15
38 Jordan Belchos Canada 2 7 5 14
39 Felix Rijhnen Germany 11 11
40 Lucas Makowsky Canada 10 10
41 Martin Hänggi Switzerland 9 9
42 Marco Cignini Italy 3 5 8
43 Sebastian Druszkiewicz Poland 7 7
44 Felix Maly Germany 6 6
Haralds Silovs Latvia 6 6
46 Shane Williamson Japan 4 2 6
47 Arjen van der Kieft Netherlands 5 5
Kim Cheol-min South Korea 5 5
49 Takuro Ogawa Japan 4 4
Maarten Swings Belgium 4 4
51 Robert Binna Austria 3 3
Simen Spieler Nilsen Norway 3 3
53 Livio Wenger Switzerland 2 2
54 Joo Hyong-jun South Korea 1 1
Ko Byung-wook South Korea 1 1
Shota Nakamura Japan 1 1
Konrad Niedźwiedzki Poland 1 1

References

  1. ^ a b "Essent ISU World Cup Speed Skating 2013/14". International Skating Union. 29 July 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-05-17. Retrieved 6 September 2013.
  2. ^ "Essent ISU World Cup Calgary – November 8-10, 2013 – Result 5000m Men Division A – Rankings as of Nov 10 2013 1:28PM". International Skating Union. 10 November 2013. Retrieved 10 November 2013.
  3. ^ "Essent ISU World Cup Salt Lake City – November 15-17, 2013 – Result 5000m Men Division A – Rankings as of Nov 17 2013 3:55PM". International Skating Union. 17 November 2013. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  4. ^ "Essent ISU World Cup Astana – November 30, December 1-2, 2013 – Result 10000m Men Division A – Rankings as of Dec 1 2013 6:04PM". International Skating Union. 1 December 2013. Retrieved 1 December 2013.
  5. ^ "Essent ISU World Cup Berlin – December 6-8, 2013 – Result 5000m Men Division A – Rankings as of Dec 8 2013 4:18PM". International Skating Union. 8 December 2013. Retrieved 8 December 2013.
  6. ^ "Essent ISU World Cup Inzell – March 7-9, 2014 – Result 5000m Men Division A – Rankings as of Mar 7 2014 3:32PM". International Skating Union. 7 March 2014. Retrieved 7 March 2014.
  7. ^ "Essent ISU World Cup Heerenveen – March 14-15, 2014 – Result 5000m Men Division A – Rankings as of Mar 16 2014 3:35PM". International Skating Union. 16 March 2014. Retrieved 16 May 2014.
  8. ^ "Essent ISU WorldCup 2013/2014 – World Cup Men 5000m – Rankings 5000m Men – Rankings as of Mar 16 2014 3:18PM". International Skating Union. 16 March 2014. Archived from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 16 May 2014.