2015–16 ISU Speed Skating World Cup – Women's mass start

The women's mass start in the 2015–16 ISU Speed Skating World Cup will be contested over five races on six occasions, out of a total of World Cup occasions for the season, with the first occasion taking place in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, on 13–15 November 2015, and the final occasion taking place in Heerenveen, Netherlands, on 11–13 March 2016.[1]

The defending champion is Ivanie Blondin of Canada. Blondin finished podium in all five races, but failed to win one. Irene Schouten of the Netherlands won three races and the final classification.

Top three edit

Position Athlete Points Previous season

Race medallists edit

WC # Location Date Gold Race points Silver Race points Bronze Race points Report
1 Calgary, Canada 15 November Kim Bo-reum
  South Korea
60 Irene Schouten
  Netherlands
41 Ivanie Blondin
  Canada
23 [2]
2 Salt Lake City, United States 22 November Irene Schouten
  Netherlands
60 Ivanie Blondin
  Canada
40 Misaki Oshigiri
  Japan
20 [3]
3 Inzell, Germany 6 December Irene Schouten
  Netherlands
60 Ivanie Blondin
  Canada
40 Park Do-yeong
  South Korea
20 [4]
4 Heerenveen, Netherlands 13 December Misaki Oshigiri
  Japan
65 Carien Kleibeuker
  Netherlands
43 Ivanie Blondin
  Canada
20 [5]
6 Heerenveen, Netherlands 13 March Irene Schouten
  Netherlands
60 Ivanie Blondin
  Canada
40 Miho Takagi
  Japan
20 [6]
Note: in mass start, race points are accumulated during the race. The skater with most race points is the winner. The races are over 16 laps.

Standings edit

# Name Nat. CGY SLC INZ HVN1 HVN2 Total
1 Irene Schouten   80 100 100 36 150 466
2 Ivanie Blondin   70 80 80 70 120 420
3 Misaki Oshigiri   25 70 100 76 271
4 Miho Takagi   36 16 28 45 104 229
5 Hao Jiachen   21 36 24 32 90 203
6 Heather Richardson-Bergsma   50 28 45 24 36 183
7 Luiza Złotkowska   11 50 32 40 32 165
8 Liu Jing   14 40 50 12 45 161
9 Janneke Ensing   32 60 40 19 151
10 Park Do-yeong   40 19 70 21 150
11 Francesca Bettrone   15 18 18 50 40 141
12 Carien Kleibeuker   11 25 80 14 130
13 Martina Sáblíková   60 60 5 125
14 Francesca Lollobrigida   24 24 36 14 21 119
15 Kim Bo-Reum   100 5 105
16 Vanessa Bittner   6 19 69 12 97
17 Josie Spence   10 45 5 28 88
18 Marina Zueva   18 12 16 16 24 86
19 Claudia Pechstein   16 32 12 8 16 84
20 Jelena Peeters   8 14 16 18 28 84
21 Nana Takagi   28 25 21 0 74
22 Nikola Zdráhalová   45 10 10 6 71
23 Noh Seon-Yeong   19 21 8 0 48
24 Aleksandra Goss   8 8 6 11 18 43
25 Paige Schwartzburg   6 15 6 15 42
26 Katarzyna Wozniak   6 11 8 25
27 Park Ji-woo   15 10 25
28 Bente Kraus   12 4 6 22
29 Erin Bartlett   0 0 0 15 15
30 Saskia Alusalu   6 2 4 12
31 Isabelle Weidemann   0 8 1 0 9
32 Tatyana Mikhailova   4 4 0 1 9
33 Sofie Karoline Haugen   8 0 8
34 Natalie Kerschbaummayr   2 1 0 3
35 Natalya Voronina   0 2 2
36 Katerina Novotná   2 2
37 Lisa van der Geest   1 1

References edit

  1. ^ "International Skating Union – Communication No. 1958" (PDF). International Skating Union. 3 August 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
  2. ^ "ISU World Cup Calgary – November 13-15, 2015 – Result Mass Start Ladies – Rankings as of Nov 15 2015 6:53PM". International Skating Union. 15 November 2015. Retrieved 7 December 2015.
  3. ^ "ISU World Cup Salt Lake City – November 20-22, 2015 – Result Massa Start Ladies Division A – Rankings as of Nov 22 2015 4:19PM". International Skating Union. 22 November 2015. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
  4. ^ "ISU World Cup Inzell – 4–6 December 2015 – Result Mass Start Ladies". International Skating Union (ISU). 6 December 2015. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  5. ^ "ISU World Cup Heerenveen – 11–13 December 2015 – Result Mass start Ladies Division A". International Skating Union (ISU). 13 December 2015. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  6. ^ "ISU World Cup Heerenveen – 11–13 March – Result Mass start Ladies Division A". International Skating Union (ISU). 13 March 2016. Retrieved 13 March 2016.