2010–11 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Men's 1500 metres

The 1500 metres distance for men in the 2010–11 ISU Speed Skating World Cup was contested over six races on six occasions, out of a total of eight World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 12–14 November 2010, and the final occasion also taking place in Heerenveen on 4–6 March 2011.[1]

Shani Davis of the United States successfully defended his title, while Håvard Bøkko of Norway repeated his second place from the previous season, and Stefan Groothuis of the Netherlands came third.

Top three

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Medal Athlete Points Previous season
Gold   Shani Davis 440 1st
Silver   Håvard Bøkko 357 2nd
Bronze   Stefan Groothuis 342 6th

Race medallists

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Occasion # Location Date Gold Time Silver Time Bronze Time Report
1 Heerenveen, Netherlands 13 November Shani Davis
  United States
1:45.04 Simon Kuipers
  Netherlands
1:45.48 Mark Tuitert
  Netherlands
1:45.95 [1]
2 Berlin, Germany 20 November Håvard Bøkko
  Norway
1:45.27 Trevor Marsicano
  United States
1:46.15 Stefan Groothuis
  Netherlands
1:46.31 [2]
3 Hamar, Norway 27 November Trevor Marsicano
  United States
1:45.54 Simon Kuipers
  Netherlands
1:45.97 Shani Davis
  United States
1:45.98 [3]
6 Moscow, Russia 28 January Ivan Skobrev
  Russia
1:45.49 Denny Morrison
  Canada
1:46.25 Mark Tuitert
  Netherlands
1:46.59 [4]
7 Salt Lake City, United States 18 February Trevor Marsicano
  United States
1:43.35 Shani Davis
  United States
1:43.38 Mark Tuitert
  Netherlands
1:43.54 [5]
8 Heerenveen, Netherlands 5 March Shani Davis
  United States
1:45.92 Stefan Groothuis
  Netherlands
1:46.09 Ivan Skobrev
  Russia
1:46.59 [6]

Standings

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Standings as of 6 March 2011 (end of the season).[2]

# Name Nat. HVN1 BER HAM MOS SLC HVN2 Total
1 Shani Davis   100 40 70 80 150 440
2 Håvard Bøkko   32 100 50 50 50 75 357
3 Stefan Groothuis   60 70 32 60 120 342
4 Ivan Skobrev   36 24 60 100 8 105 333
5 Trevor Marsicano   21 80 100 100 24 325
6 Simon Kuipers   80 45 80 40 40 18 303
7 Mark Tuitert   70 28 28 70 70 32 298
8 Denny Morrison   2 25 45 80 60 45 257
9 Jonathan Kuck   24 36 40 90 190
10 Mikael Flygind-Larsen   50 21 24 36 45 12 188
11 Lucas Makowsky   28 50 12 28 28 40 186
12 Wouter olde Heuvel   45 18 45 32 21 161
13 Alexis Contin   19 60 18 24 28 149
14 Rhian Ket   16 32 8 36 36 128
15 Yevgeny Lalenkov   18 14 21 21 21 14 109
16 Zbigniew Bródka   25 16 16 16 14 8 95
17 Enrico Fabris   40 12 36 88
18 Konrad Niedźwiedzki   3 6 25 12 18 16 80
19 Henrik Christiansen   15 8 14 8 12 10 67
20 Kjeld Nuis   32 25 57
21 Matteo Anesi   6 0 11 24 10 6 57
22 Pavel Baynov   2 19 16 4 41
23 Jan Szymański   8 19 6 5 38
24 Christoffer Fagerli Rukke   19 14 0 33
25 Robert Lehmann   8 0 0 10 15 33
26 Philippe Riopel   5 1 8 18 0 32
27 Roland Cieslak   25 6 31
28 Dmitry Babenko   10 6 10 26
29 Jörg Dallmann   2 11 0 6 6 25
30 Aleksandr Rumyantsev   0 4 0 15 5 24
31 Aleksey Yesin   12 10 22
32 Denis Kuzin   15 5 0 20
33 Joel Eriksson   1 2 6 11 20
34 Aleksandr Zhigin   0 19 19
35 Lee Jong-woo   14 5 19
36 Koen Verweij   15 15
37 Ryan Bedford   4 11 0 15
38 Håvard Holmefjord Lorentzen   6 8 14
39 Lee Seung-hoon   11 11
40 Justin Warsylewicz   4 0 1 5 1 11
41 Shane Dobbin   8 8
Vitaly Mikhailov   0 0 8 8
43 Luca Stefani   6 0 6
44 Joshua Wood   4 4
Joshua Lose   0 0 0 4 0 4
Fredrik van der Horst   4 4
47 Shota Nakamura   0 2 2
Milan Sáblík   0 0 0 2 2
49 Christian Pichler   1 0 1
Mirko Giacomo Nenzi   1 0 0 0 1

References

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  1. ^ "2010/2011 ISU World Cup". Archived from the original on 2012-03-12. Retrieved 2010-11-13.
  2. ^ "Essent ISU WorldCup 2010/2011 (Rankings 1500m Men)". ISU. Retrieved 15 February 2011.