World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships Explained

The World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships[1] [2] [3] are a series of speed skating competitions organised by the International Skating Union.

History

Since the late 19th century, speed skating championships were always decided by racing multiple distances – four different distances for the Allround Championships, and two different distances (which have to be skated twice) for Sprint Championships. However, the speed skating events at the Olympic Games were always individual distances, no medals are awarded for a combined event (the only exception being the 1924 Winter Olympics).

Towards the end of the 20th century, skaters started to specialize and it became rare that a skater was able to dominate both the short and the long distances. Perhaps the last skater able to do so was Eric Heiden, who won all five distances at the 1980 Winter Olympics. As a consequence of this specialization, the difference between the Olympic Games and the regular championships, and the popularity of both the Speed skating World Cup and Single Distance Championships held nationally in several countries, the International Skating Union decided to organise the World Single Distance Championships.

Starting in 1996, this originally was an annual event, but in 1998 it became clear that having World Single Distance Championships and the Single Distance Championships as held at the Winter Olympics during the same year was too much, so since 1999, the World Single Distance Championships are no longer held in (Winter) Olympic years.

Distances

The skaters compete in the following distances:

!Men(List of medal winners)!Women(List of medal winners)!Notes
500 m500 m
1,000 m1,000 m
1,500 m1,500 m
5,000 m3,000 m
10,000 m5,000 m
Team pursuitTeam pursuit(since 2005)
(since 2015)
Team sprint(2019–2020, since 2023)

Summary

ISU Single Distances Championships
NumberYearCityCountryEvents
1 10
2 10
3 10
4 10
5 10
6 10
7 10
8 10
9 12
10 12
11 12
12 12
13 12
14 12
15 12
16 14
17 14
18 14
19 16
20 16
21 14
22 16
23 16

Medal summary

The medal table by nations is the total number of the 16 distances (men and women) at all of the 23 championships (1996–2024). The individual tables are about the eight distances by gender.

Nations

All medals, click on the nation to go to the list of medallists.

Updated after the 2024 World Championships.

Men

Top 10, including team pursuit and team sprint. Boldface denotes active skaters and highest medal count among all skaters (including those who are not included in these tables) per type.

RankSkaterCountryFromToGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 2007 2020 21 3 2 26
2 2004 2015 8 4 3 15
3 1997 2013 7 8 5 20
4 1996 2004 7 2 3 12
5 1999 2008 6 2 3 11
6 Jordan Stolz 2023 2024 6 6
7 Jorrit Bergsma 2012 2023 5 8 13
8 2001 2009 5 5 3 13
9 1996 2005 5 3 2 10
10 Pavel Kulizhnikov 2015 2021 5 3 1 9

Women

Top 10, including team pursuit and team sprint. Boldface denotes active skaters and highest medal count among all skaters (including those who are not included in these tables) per type.

RankSkaterCountryFromToGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Martina Sáblíková 2007 2024 16 6 4 26
2 2007 2021 15 15 1 31
3 1997 2009 12 9 1 22
4 1996 2001 11 3 14
5 2015 2024 8 2 5 15
6 2007 2013 7 2 3 12
7 Claudia Pechstein 1996 2017 5 13 12 30
8 Ivanie Blondin 2015 2024 5 7 2 14
9 Antoinette Rijpma-de Jong 2016 2023 5 4 2 11
10 Miho Takagi 2015 2024 5 3 6 14

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ISU World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships 2016, Kolomna, Russia . ISU.org . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160311172946/http://static.isu.org/media/1002/announcement-world-single-distances-ss-champs-2016-kolomna.pdf . 11 March 2016.
  2. Web site: ISU World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships 2017, Gangneung, Korea . ISU.org . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20170202235352/http://static.isu.org/media/419577/announcement-isu-world-single-distances-ss-champs-2017-gangneung.pdf . 2 February 2017.
  3. Web site: ISU World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships, 2019 Inzell, Germany . ISU.org . . 12 July 2018.