Russia at The 2006 Winter Olympics - Speed Skating

Speed Skating

Men
Athlete Event Race 1 Final
Time Rank Time Rank
Artyom Detyshev 5000 m n/a 6:32.85 15
10000 m Disqualified
Dmitry Dorofeyev 500 m 35.24 35.17 1:10.41
1000 m n/a 1:09.74 10
Aleksandr Kibalko 1000 m n/a 1:10.50 21
1500 m n/a 1:50.29 32
Yury Kokhanets 5000 m n/a 6:34.62 17
Sergey Kornilov 500 m 36.00 36.24 1:12.24 27
Yevgeny Lalenkov 1000 m n/a 1:09.46 7
1500 m n/a 1:49.00 23
Dmitry Lobkov 500 m 35.55 35.62 1:11.17 14
Alexey Proshin 500 m 35.96 35.94 1:11.90 24
1000 m n/a 1:10.14 15
Dmitry Shepel 1500 m n/a 1:48.74 21
Ivan Skobrev 1500 m n/a 1:46.91 6
5000 m n/a 6:27.02 11
10000 m n/a 13:17.54 6
Women
Athlete Event Race 1 Final
Time Rank Time Rank
Yekaterina Abramova 1000 m n/a 1:17.33 9
1500 m n/a 2:01.63 21
Varvara Barysheva 1000 m n/a 1:17.52 11
1500 m n/a 2:01.60 20
Yekaterina Lobysheva 1000 m n/a 1:17.52 11
1500 m n/a 1:58.87 6
Yulia Nemaya 500 m 39.63 1:12.76 1:52.39 29
Svetlana Vysokova 3000 m n/a 4:13.94 18
Valentina Yakshina 1500 m n/a 2:02.15 25
3000 m n/a 4:19.43 24
Svetlana Zhurova 500 m 38.23 38.34 1:16.57
1000 m n/a 1:17.13 7
Team Pursuit
Athlete Event Seeding Quarterfinal Semifinal Final
Time Rank Opposition
Time
Opposition
Time
Opposition
Time
Rank
From:
Artyom Detyshev
Aleksandr Kibalko
Yevgeny Lalenkov
Dmitry Shepel
Ivan Skobrev
Men's team pursuit 3:49.75 6 Netherlands (3)
L Overtaken
Did not advance 5th place final
United States (7)
W 3:46.91
5
From:
Yekaterina Abramova
Varvara Barysheva
Galina Likhachova
Yekaterina Lobysheva
Svetlana Vysokova
Women's team pursuit 3:03.19 1 China (8)
W Overtook
Germany (5)
L 3:07.42
Bronze final
Japan (7)
W Overtook

Read more about this topic:  Russia At The 2006 Winter Olympics

Famous quotes containing the words speed and/or skating:

    No speed of wind or water rushing by
    But you have speed far greater.
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)

    Good writing is a kind of skating which carries off the performer where he would not go, and is only right admirable when to all its beauty and speed a subserviency to the will, like that of walking, is added.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)