World Allround Speed Skating Championships for Women

The International Skating Union has organised the World Allround Speed Skating Championships for Women since 1936. Unofficial championships were held in the years 1933–1935.

World Allround Speed Skating Championships
Statusactive
Genresports event
DateJanuary–March
Frequencybiennial
Locationvarious
Inaugurated1933 (1933)
Organised byISU

History

Distances used

  • In the years 1933–1935, three distances were skated: 500 m, 1000 m and 1500 m.
  • In the years 1936–1955, four distances were skated: 500 m, 1000 m, 3000 m and 5000 m (the old combination).
  • In the years 1956–1982, four distances were skated: 500 m, 1000 m, 1500 m and 3000 m (the mini combination).
  • Since 1983, four distances are skated: 500 m, 1500 m, 3000 m and 5000 m (the small combination).

Ranking systems used

  • Since 1933, the samalog system has been in use. However, the rule that a skater winning at least three distances (at least two distances in 1933–1935) was automatically World Champion remained in effect until (and including) 1986. This rule was applied in 1949 when Maria Isakova from the Soviet Union won three distances and thus become World Champion despite after end of fourth distance (5000 m) she had a worse samalog score than her compatriots Zoya Kholshevnikova and Rimma Zhukova who won silver and bronze medals respectively.

Records

  • Gunda Niemann-Stirnemann (née Kleemann) from East Germany won a total of 8 world championship titles, three consecutive in 1991, 1992, 1993, and another five consecutive titles in 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998 and 1999.
  • Ireen Wüst from Netherlands has a record 13 medals, 12 of which were won in consecutive championships (2007–2018) – seven golds (2007, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2017, 2020), four silvers (2008, 2015, 2016, 2018) and two bronzes (2009, 2010). Previously, this record belonged to Claudia Pechstein from Germany – 11 medals in consecutive championships (1996–2006) with one gold (2000), eight silvers (1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2006) and two bronzes (2002, 2005).
  • The youngest World Allround Champion is Laila Schou Nilsen from Norway who won her first of three world allround titles in 1935 at age 15 (although it was unofficial world championships). Two years later she won official world championships at age 17 (which is also a record).
  • The oldest World Allround Champion is Atje Keulen-Deelstra from Netherlands who won her fourth and last world allround title in 1974 at age 35.
  • Claudia Pechstein from Germany hold record by number of participations in the championships (25 times in 1992–2022).
  • The biggest point margin between the winner and the second placed skater at the end of competition is 20.923 points between Verné Lesche from Finland and Else Marie Christiansen from Norway in 1947.
  • At the 1949 championships, Maria Isakova from the Soviet Union won three distances and thus become World Allround Champion in accordance with then-existing rule. Being de-facto champion, she finished in 6th place at final distance (5000 m) and in third place in points classification by losing 1.510 points to her compatriot Zoya Kholshevnikova who eventually become silver medalist. Without taking into account this case, the smallest winning margin between the champion and the runner-up is 0.073 points between Soviet skaters Khalida Shchegoleyeva and Rimma Zhukova in 1953.
  • There are eight speed skaters who become World Allround Champions by winning all four distances at the championships – Laila Schou Nilsen from Norway (1937), Verné Lesche from Finland (1947), Lidiya Skoblikova from the Soviet Union (1963 and 1964), Beth Heiden from the United States (1979), Andrea Schöne from East Germany (1985), Gunda Niemann from Germany (1995), Anni Friesinger from Germany (2005) and Cindy Klassen from Canada (2006). Lidiya Skoblikova is the only speed skater who achieved this feat twice.
  • By contrast, there are five speed skaters who become World Allround Champions without winning any of four distances – Lidia Selikhova from the Soviet Union (1954), Valentina Stenina from the Soviet Union (1966), Atje Keulen-Deelstra from Netherlands (1970), Cindy Klassen from Canada (2003) and Ireen Wüst from Netherlands (2012).
  • There are five female speed skaters who become champions both at the World Allround and the World Sprint Championships – Sylvia Burka from Canada (Allround: 1976; Sprint: 1977), Natalya Petrusyova from the Soviet Union (Allround: 1980, 1981; Sprint: 1982), Karin Kania (Enke, Busch) from East Germany (Allround: 1982, 1984, 1986, 1987, 1988; Sprint: 1980, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1987), Anni Friesinger from Germany (Allround: 2001, 2002, 2005; Sprint: 2007) and Miho Takagi from Japan (Allround: 2018; Sprint: 2020, 2024). Karin Kania (Enke, Busch) remained the only female speed skater who win both championships in one calendar year by firstly achieving this feat in 1984 and then repeating this success in 1986 and 1987. Anni Friesinger and Miho Takagi are the only female speed skaters who won world titles at three different championships – World Allround Championships, World Sprint Championships and World Single Distances Championships (at the latter competition Friesinger won 12 gold medals in 1998–2009 and Takagi won five gold medals in 2015–2024).

Medal winners

Unofficial championships

Year Location Gold Silver Bronze
1933 Oslo Liselotte Landbeck Synnøve Lie Helen Bina
1934 Oslo Undis Blikken Verné Lesche Synnøve Lie
1935 Oslo Laila Schou Nilsen Synnøve Lie Kit Klein

Official championships

Year Location Gold Silver Bronze
1936 Stockholm Kit Klein Verné Lesche Synnøve Lie
1937 Davos Laila Schou Nilsen Synnøve Lie Verné Lesche
1938 Oslo Laila Schou Nilsen (3 ) Verné Lesche Synnøve Lie
1939 Tampere Verné Lesche Liisa Salmi Laura Tamminen
1940 Not held due to World War II
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947 Drammen Verné Lesche (2) Else Marie Christiansen Maggi Kvestad
1948 Turku Maria Isakova Lidia Selikhova Zoya Kholshevnikova
1949 Kongsberg Maria Isakova Zoya Kholshevnikova Rimma Zhukova
1950 Moscow Maria Isakova (3) Zinaida Krotova Rimma Zhukova
1951 Eskilstuna Eevi Huttunen Randi Thorvaldsen Ragnhild Mikkelsen
1952 Kokkola Lidia Selikhova Maria Anikanova Randi Thorvaldsen
1953 Lillehammer Khalida Shchegoleyeva Rimma Zhukova Lidia Selikhova
1954 Östersund Lidia Selikhova (2) Rimma Zhukova Sofya Kondakova
1955 Kuopio Rimma Zhukova Tamara Rylova Sofya Kondakova
1956 Kvarnsveden Sofya Kondakova Rimma Zhukova Tamara Rylova
1957 Imatra Inga Artamonova Tamara Rylova Lidia Selikhova
1958 Kristinehamn Inga Artamonova Tamara Rylova Sofya Kondakova
1959 Sverdlovsk Tamara Rylova Valentina Stenina Lidiya Skoblikova
1960 Östersund Valentina Stenina Tamara Rylova Lidiya Skoblikova
1961 Tønsberg Valentina Stenina Albina Tuzova Lidiya Skoblikova
1962 Imatra Inga Voronina Lidiya Skoblikova Albina Tuzova
1963 Karuizawa Lidiya Skoblikova Inga Voronina Valentina Stenina
1964 Kristinehamn Lidiya Skoblikova (2) Inga Voronina Tamara Rylova
1965 Oulu Inga Voronina (4) Valentina Stenina Stien Kaiser
1966 Trondheim Valentina Stenina (3) Kim Song-soon Stien Kaiser
1967 Deventer Stien Kaiser Lāsma Kauniste Dianne Holum
1968 Helsinki Stien Kaiser (2) Ans Schut Carry Geijssen
1969 Grenoble Lāsma Kauniste Stien Kaiser Ans Schut
1970 West Allis Atje Keulen-Deelstra Stien Kaiser Sigrid Sundby
1971 Helsinki Nina Statkevich Stien Kaiser Lyudmila Titova
1972 Heerenveen Atje Keulen-Deelstra Stien Baas-Kaiser Dianne Holum
1973 Strömsund Atje Keulen-Deelstra Tatyana Shelekhova Trijnie Rep
1974 Heerenveen Atje Keulen-Deelstra (4) Tatyana Averina Nina Statkevich
1975 Assen Karin Kessow Tatyana Averina Sheila Young
1976 Gjøvik Sylvia Burka Tatyana Averina Sheila Young
1977 Keystone Vera Bryndzei Galina Stepanskaya Galina Nikitina
1978 Helsinki Tatyana Averina Galina Stepanskaya Marion Dittmann
1979 The Hague Beth Heiden Natalya Petrusyova Sylvia Burka
1980 Hamar Natalya Petrusyova Beth Heiden Bjørg Eva Jensen
1981 Sainte-Foy Natalya Petrusyova (2) Karin Enke Sarah Docter
1982 Inzell Karin Busch Andrea Schöne Natalya Petrusyova
1983 Karl-Marx-Stadt Andrea Schöne Karin Enke Valentina Lalenkova
1984 Deventer Karin Enke Andrea Schöne Gabi Schönbrunn
1985 Sarajevo Andrea Schöne (2) Gabi Schönbrunn Sabine Brehm
1986 The Hague Karin Kania Andrea Ehrig Sabine Brehm
1987 West Allis Karin Kania Andrea Ehrig Yvonne van Gennip
1988 Skien Karin Kania (5) Yvonne van Gennip Erwina Ryś-Ferens
1989 Lake Placid Constanze Moser Gunda Kleemann Yvonne van Gennip
1990 Calgary Jacqueline Börner Seiko Hashimoto Constanze Moser
1991 Hamar Gunda Kleemann Heike Warnicke Lia van Schie
1992 Heerenveen Gunda Niemann Emese Hunyady Seiko Hashimoto
1993 Berlin Gunda Niemann Emese Hunyady Heike Warnicke
1994 Butte Emese Hunyady Ulrike Adeberg Mihaela Dascălu
1995 Savalen Gunda Niemann Lyudmila Prokasheva Annamarie Thomas
1996 Inzell Gunda Niemann Claudia Pechstein Mie Uehara
1997 Nagano Gunda Niemann Claudia Pechstein Tonny de Jong
1998 Heerenveen Gunda Niemann-Stirnemann Claudia Pechstein Anni Friesinger
1999 Hamar Gunda Niemann-Stirnemann (8) Claudia Pechstein Tonny de Jong
2000 Milwaukee Claudia Pechstein Gunda Niemann-Stirnemann Maki Tabata
2001 Budapest Anni Friesinger Claudia Pechstein Renate Groenewold
2002 Heerenveen Anni Friesinger Cindy Klassen Claudia Pechstein
2003 Gothenburg Cindy Klassen Claudia Pechstein Daniela Anschütz
2004 Hamar Renate Groenewold Claudia Pechstein Wieteke Cramer
2005 Moscow Anni Friesinger (3) Cindy Klassen Claudia Pechstein
2006 Calgary Cindy Klassen (2) Claudia Pechstein Kristina Groves
2007 Heerenveen Ireen Wüst Anni Friesinger Cindy Klassen
2008 Berlin Paulien van Deutekom Ireen Wüst Kristina Groves
2009 Hamar Martina Sáblíková Kristina Groves Ireen Wüst
2010 Heerenveen Martina Sáblíková Kristina Groves Ireen Wüst
2011 Calgary Ireen Wüst Christine Nesbitt Martina Sáblíková
2012 Moscow Ireen Wüst Martina Sáblíková Christine Nesbitt
2013 Hamar Ireen Wüst Diane Valkenburg Yekaterina Shikhova
2014 Heerenveen Ireen Wüst Olga Graf Yvonne Nauta
2015 Calgary Martina Sáblíková Ireen Wüst Ida Njåtun
2016 Berlin Martina Sáblíková Ireen Wüst Antoinette de Jong
2017 Hamar Ireen Wüst Martina Sáblíková Miho Takagi
2018 Amsterdam Miho Takagi Ireen Wüst Annouk van der Weijden
2019 Calgary Martina Sáblíková (5) Miho Takagi Antoinette de Jong
2020 Hamar Ireen Wüst (7) Ivanie Blondin Antoinette de Jong
2022 Hamar Irene Schouten Miho Takagi Antoinette de Jong
2024 Inzell Joy Beune Marijke Groenewoud Antoinette Rijpma-de Jong

All-time medal count

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Soviet Union24252069
2 Netherlands17122251
3 Germany1212529
4 East Germany108523
5 Czech Republic5218
6 Norway45918
7 Canada36514
8 Finland3429
9 Austria2204
10 United States21710
11 Japan1348
12 Russia0112
13 Kazakhstan0101
 North Korea0101
15 Poland0011
 Romania0011
Totals (16 entries)838383249

Unofficial World Championships of 1933–1935 (not recognized by the ISU) included

Multiple medalists

Boldface denotes active skaters and highest medal count among all skaters (including those not included in these tables) per type.

Rank Skater Country From To Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Gunda Niemann-Stirnemann (Kleemann)  East Germany
 Germany
1989 2000 8 2 10
2 Ireen Wüst  Netherlands 2007 2020 7 4 2 13
3 Martina Sáblíková  Czech Republic 2009 2019 5 2 1 8
4 Karin Kania (Enke, Busch)  East Germany 1981 1988 5 2 7
5 Inga Voronina (Artamonova)  Soviet Union 1957 1965 4 2 6
6 Atje Keulen-Deelstra  Netherlands 1970 1974 4 4
7 Valentina Stenina  Soviet Union 1959 1966 3 2 1 6
8 Anni Friesinger  Germany 1998 2007 3 1 1 5
9 Maria Isakova  Soviet Union 1948 1950 3 3
Laila Schou Nilsen  Norway 1935 1938 3 * 3 *

* including one medal won at the unofficial championship of 1935.

See also

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