1910 World Allround Speed Skating Championships
International speed skating competition
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The 1910 World Allround Speed Skating Championships took place on 5 and 6 March 1910 at the ice rink Pohjoissatama in Helsinki, Finland.
| World Allround Speed Skating Championships | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() Nikolay Strunnikov World champion 1910 | |||||||||||||
| Venue | Pohjoissatama, Helsinki, Finland | ||||||||||||
| Dates | 5â6 March | ||||||||||||
| Competitors | 12 from 4 nations | ||||||||||||
| Medalist men | |||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
Oscar Mathisen was the defending champion. Nikolay Strunnikov had the fewest points awarded and became world champion.
Allround results
| Place | Athlete | Country | Points | 500m | 5000m | 10000m | 1500m |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nikolay Strunnikov | 9 | 49.3 (3) | 9:31.8 (3) | 18:34.0 (1) | 2:33.0 (2) | ||
| Oscar Mathisen | 10 | 46.3 (1) | 9:30.6 (2) | 19:18.0 (6) | 2:32.6 (1) | ||
| Martin Sæterhaug | 14 | 47.8 (2) | 9:32.0 (4) | 19:17.6 (5) | 2:35.2 (3) | ||
| 4 | Magnus Johansen | 15 | 51.0 (10) | 9:27.9 (1) | 18:57.2 (2) | 2:39.1 (4) | |
| 5 | Väinö Wickström | 18 | 49.5 (4) | 9:44.0 (6) | 19:08.8 (3) | 2:39.2 (5) | |
| 6 | Jevgeni Boernov | 26 | 54.5 (12) | 9:37.0 (5) | 19:15.8 (4) | 2:42.2 (7) | |
| 7 | Björn Damstén | 28 | 49.8 (6) | 9:45.8 (7) | 19:33.8 (8) | 2:43.0 (8) | |
| 8 | Gunnar Strömstén | 28 | 50.4 (9) | 9:46.2 (8) | 19:24.5 (7) | 2:39.4 (6) | |
| 9 | Thomas Bohrer | 33 | 50.3 (8) | 10:01.1 (10) | 19:58.4 (9) | 2:44.3 (9) | |
| 10 | Birger Carlsson | 39 | 53.8 (11) | 10:18.8 (11) | 20:00.0 (10) | 2:52.6 (10) | |
| NC | Jussi Wiinikainen | â | 49.7 (5) | 9:57.2 (9) | NS | NS | |
| NC | Johan Vikander | â | 49.9 (7) | NF | NS | NS |
- * = Fell
- NC = Not classified
- NF = Not finished
- NS = Not started
- DQ = Disqualified
Source: SpeedSkatingStats.com[1]
Rules
Four distances have to be skated:
- 500m
- 1500m
- 5000m
- 10000m
The ranking was made by award ranking points. The points were awarded to the skaters who had skated all the distances. The final ranking was then decided by ordering the skaters by lowest point totals.
- 1 point for 1st place
- 2 point for 2nd place
- 3 point for 3rd place
- and so on
One could win the World Championships also by winning at least three of the four distances, so the ranking could be affected by this.
Silver and bronze medals were awarded.
