Speed Skating
- Men
Event | Athlete | Race | |
---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | ||
500 m | Sergey Klevchenya | 38.26 | 21 |
Vadim Shakshakbayev | 37.86 | 14 | |
Igor Zhelezovsky | 37.57 | 8 | |
Aleksandr Golubev | 37.51 | 7 | |
1000 m | Andrey Bakhvalov | 1:17.21 | 25 |
Aleksandr Klimov | 1:16.05 | 13 | |
Nikolay Gulyayev | 1:15.46 | 8 | |
Igor Zhelezovsky | 1:15.05 | 6 | |
1500 m | Aleksandr Klimov | 2:00.94 | 31 |
Konstantin Kalistratov | 1:59.02 | 22 | |
Yuriy Shulha | 1:57.80 | 16 | |
Igor Zhelezovsky | 1:57.24 | 10 | |
5000 m | Bronislav Snetkov | 7:28.93 | 29 |
Vadim Sayutin | 7:13.20 | 11 | |
Yevgeny Sanarov | 7:11.38 | 8 | |
10,000 m | Vadim Sayutin | 14:49.31 | 19 |
Bronislav Snetkov | 14:46.87 | 17 | |
Yevgeny Sanarov | 14:38.99 | 10 |
- Women
Event | Athlete | Race | |
---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | ||
500 m | Lyudmila Prokasheva | 43.19 | 31 |
Yelena Tyushnyakova | 42.65 | 29 | |
Oksana Ravilova | 41.73 | 16 | |
Nataliya Polozkova | 41.61 | 15 | |
1000 m | Yelena Lapuga | 1:25.21 | 28 |
Nataliya Polozkova | 1:24.30 | 20 | |
Oksana Ravilova | 1:24.14 | 15 | |
Yelena Tyushnyakova | 1:22.97 | 7 | |
1500 m | Yelena Lapuga | 2:11.72 | 25 |
Lyudmila Prokasheva | 2:08.71 | 10 | |
Svetlana Bazhanova | 2:07.81 | 6 | |
Nataliya Polozkova | 2:07.12 | 4 | |
3000 m | Lyudmila Prokasheva | 4:30.76 | 10 |
Svetlana Bazhanova | 4:28.19 | 7 | |
Svetlana Boyko | 4:28.00 | 5 | |
5000 m | Svetlana Bazhanova | 7:45.55 | 7 |
Svetlana Boyko | 7:44.19 | 6 | |
Lyudmila Prokasheva | 7:41.65 | 5 |
Read more about this topic: Unified Team At The 1992 Winter Olympics
Famous quotes containing the words speed and/or skating:
“There exist certain individuals who are, by nature, given purely to contemplation and are utterly unsuited to action, and who, nevertheless, under a mysterious and unknown impulse, sometimes act with a speed which they themselves would have thought beyond them.”
—Charles Baudelaire (18211867)
“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 (18031882)