1968 Winter Universiade - Speed Skating

Speed Skating

Men: 500 M
Gold – Erhard Keller (West Germany)
Silver – Keiichi Suzuki (Japan)
Bronze – Takayuki Hida (Japan)

Men: 1500 M
Gold – Aleksandr Zhekulayev (Soviet Union)
Silver – Valeriy Bayonov (Soviet Union)
Bronze – Arkadiy Kichenko (Soviet Union)
Bronze – Pekka Halinen (Finland)

Men: 3000 M
Gold – Aleksandr Zhekulayev (Soviet Union)
Silver – Pekka Halinen (Finland)
Bronze – Anatoliy Nokhrin (Soviet Union)

Men: 5000 M
Gold – Aleksandr Zhekulayev (Soviet Union)
Silver – Anatoliy Nokhrin (Soviet Union)
Bronze – Yoshiaki Demachi (Japan)

Universiade
Summer Universiade
  • 1959 Turin
  • 1961 Sofia
  • 1963 Porto Alegre
  • 1965 Budapest
  • 1967 Tokyo
  • 1970 Turin
  • 1973 Moscow
  • 1975 Rome
  • 1977 Sofia
  • 1979 Mexico City
  • 1981 Bucharest
  • 1983 Edmonton
  • 1985 Kobe
  • 1987 Zagreb
  • 1989 Duisburg
  • 1991 Sheffield
  • 1993 Buffalo
  • 1995 Fukuoka
  • 1997 Sicily
  • 1999 Palma de Mallorca
  • 2001 Beijing
  • 2003 Daegu
  • 2005 İzmir
  • 2007 Bangkok
  • 2009 Belgrade
  • 2011 Shenzhen
  • 2013 Kazan
  • 2015 Gwangju
  • 2017 Taipei
Winter Universiade
  • 1960 Chamonix
  • 1962 Villars
  • 1964 Špindlerův Mlýn
  • 1966 Sestriere
  • 1968 Innsbruck
  • 1970 Rovaniemi
  • 1972 Lake Placid
  • 1975 Livigno
  • 1978 Špindlerův Mlýn
  • 1981 Jaca
  • 1983 Sofia
  • 1985 Belluno
  • 1987 Štrbské Pleso
  • 1989 Sofia
  • 1991 Sapporo
  • 1993 Zakopane
  • 1995 Jaca
  • 1997 Muju / Jeonju
  • 1999 Poprad Tatry
  • 2001 Zakopane
  • 2003 Tarvisio
  • 2005 Innsbruck / Seefeld
  • 2007 Turin
  • 2009 Harbin
  • 2011 Erzurum
  • 2013 Trentino
  • 2015 Granada
  • 2017 Almaty
All-time Summer Universiade medal table

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Famous quotes containing the words speed and/or skating:

    It was undoubtedly the feeling of exile—that sensation of a void within which never left us, that irrational longing to hark back to the past or else to speed up the march of time, and those keen shafts of memory that stung like fire.
    Albert Camus (1913–1960)

    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)