Speed skating at the 1988 Winter Olympics – Women's 3000 metres
Women's 3000 metres at the XV Olympic Winter Games | ||||||||||
Pictogram for speed skating | ||||||||||
Venue | Olympic Oval | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dates | February 23 | |||||||||
Competitors | 29 from 16 nations | |||||||||
Winning time | 4:11.94 | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
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Speed skating at the 1988 Winter Olympics | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
500 m | men | women | |||
1000 m | men | women | |||
1500 m | men | women | |||
3000 m | women | ||||
5000 m | men | women | |||
10,000 m | men |
The women's 3000 metres in speed skating at the 1988 Winter Olympics took place on 23 February, at the Olympic Oval. 25 competitors from 14 nations participated in the event.[1]
Records
Prior to this competition, the existing world and Olympic records were as follows:[2][3]
World record | Gabi Zange (GDR) | 4:16.76 | Calgary, Canada | 5 December 1987 |
Olympic record | Andrea Ehrig (GDR) | 4:24.79 | Sarajevo, Yugoslavia | 15 February 1984 |
The following new world and olympic records was set during the competition.
Date | Pair | Athlete | Country | Time | OR | WR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
23 February | Pair 1 | Andrea Ehrig | East Germany | 4:12.09 | OR | WR |
23 February | Pair 4 | Yvonne van Gennip | Netherlands | 4:11.94 | OR | WR |
Results
Rank | Athlete | Country | Time | Behind | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Yvonne van Gennip | Netherlands | 4:11.94 | – | (WR) | |
Andrea Ehrig | East Germany | 4:12.09 | +0.15 | ||
Gabi Zange | East Germany | 4:16.92 | +4.98 | ||
4 | Karin Kania | East Germany | 4:18.80 | +8.86 | |
5 | Erwina Ryś-Ferens | Poland | 4:22.59 | +10.59 | |
6 | Svetlana Boyko | Soviet Union | 4:22.90 | +10.96 | |
7 | Seiko Hashimoto | Japan | 4:23.29 | +11.35 | |
Yelena Lapuga | Soviet Union | 4:23.29 | +11.35 | ||
9 | Yelena Tumanova | Soviet Union | 4:24.07 | +12.13 | |
10 | Jasmin Krohn | Sweden | 4:25.06 | +13.12 | |
11 | Jane Goldman | United States | 4:25.26 | +13.32 | |
12 | Anja Mischke | West Germany | 4:26.30 | +14.36 | |
13 | Elena Belci | Italy | 4:27.21 | +15.27 | |
14 | Emese Hunyady | Austria | 4:27.56 | +15.62 | |
15 | Ariane Loignon | Canada | 4:28.55 | +16.61 | |
16 | Marieke Stam | Netherlands | 4:28.92 | +16.98 | |
17 | Han Chun-Ok | North Korea | 4:29.16 | +17.22 | |
18 | Natsue Seki | Japan | 4:29.77 | +17,83 | |
19 | Mary Docter | United States | 4:29.93 | +17.99 | |
20 | Leslie Bader | United States | 4:30.09 | +18.15 | |
21 | Zhang Qing | China | 4:30.19 | +18.25 | |
22 | Kim Young-Ok | South Korea | 4:30.60 | +18.66 | |
23 | Song Hwa-Son | North Korea | 4:31.05 | +19.11 | |
24 | Marie-France van Helden | France | 4:32.34 | +20.40 | |
25 | Minna Nystedt | Norway | 4:35.35 | +23.41 | |
26 | Chantal Côté | Canada | 4:35.74 | +23.80 | |
27 | Stéphanie Dumont | France | 4:38.03 | +26.09 | |
28 | Choi Hye-Sook | South Korea | 4:42.26 | +30.32 | |
- | Ingrid Paul | Netherlands | DQ |
References
- 1 2 "Calgary 1988 Official Report" (PDF). XV Olympic Winter Games Organizing Committee. LA84 Foundation. 1988. Retrieved January 29, 2014.
- ↑ "3000m Ladies World Record Progression". International Skating Union. Retrieved November 2, 2016.
- ↑ "3000m Ladies Olympic Record Progression". International Skating Union. Retrieved November 2, 2016.
Sports-Reference - 1988 - Women's 3000 metres
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