Carien Kleibeuker
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| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Born | 12 March 1978 Rotterdam, Netherlands |
| Height | 172 cm (5 ft 8 in) |
| Weight | 58 kg (128 lb) |
| Sport | |
| Country | |
| Sport | Speed skating |
Carien Kleibeuker (born 12 March 1978) is a Dutch former speed skater who is specialised in the long distances, 3000 and mainly 5000 metres. She is the current holder of the Dutch record on the 10,000[1] metres distances,[2] as well as the current holder of the unofficial world one-hour record, with 40,569.56 metres skated.[3]
Bribery witness
During the Dutch Single Distance Championships Kleibeuker won her first medal at a highly rated tournament as she finished in third position at the 5000 metres. In the following years she participated, but never managed to equal or improve her effort from 2000, until December 2005, when she won the 5000 metres race in the B Division at a World Cup meeting. This effort secured her a nomination for the 2006 Winter Olympics held in Turin. A top-3 ranking at the 2005 Dutch Single Distance Championships would definitely qualify her for the Olympics. She let no hesitation and won the distance with big names as Renate Groenewold, Gretha Smit and Moniek Kleinsman behind her. At the 2006 Winter Olympics Kleibeuker would finish in 10th position in the women's 5000 metres.
Besides long track speed skating, Kleibeuker also is a marathon speed skater. As of the 2007–08 season she will only focus on marathon skating, dropping her long track appearances.
At the 2006 Turin Olympics, Kleibeuker witnessed a bribery attempt by two members of the Dutch speed skating team. In 2009, she was called in as a witness by the Netherlands Olympic Committee and Sports Federation, which found that coach Ingrid Paul had offered Polish speed-skater Katarzyna Bachleda-Curuś money to forfeit the race. If she had withdrawn, it would have allowed Gretha Smit, who was eliminated, to be reinstated. Bachleda-Curuś refused.
Records
Personal records
| Personal records[4] | ||||
| Speed skating | ||||
| Event | Result | Date | Location | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 500 m | 43:29 | 12 October 2019 | Max Aicher Arena, Inzell | |
| 1000 m | 1:24.41 | 6 February 1999 | Stadio del Ghiaccio, Baselga di Pinè | |
| 1500 m | 2:02.07 | 15 October 2017 | Max Aicher Arena, Inzell | |
| 3000 m | 4:03.79 | 5 December 2014 | Sportforum Hohenschönhausen, Berlin | |
| 5000 m | 6:45.04 | 20 November 2015 | Utah Olympic Oval, Salt Lake City | Dutch record until beaten by Irene Schouten on 10 February 2022.[5] |
| 10000 m | 14:35.61 | 13 March 2018 | Thialf, Heerenveen | Current Dutch record.[2] |
| 1 hour | 40,569.56 m | 9 December 2015 | Max Aicher Arena, Inzell | Current world record (unofficial).[3] |
World records
| World records[6] | ||||
| Women's speed skating | ||||
| Event | Result | Date | Location | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 hour | 40,569.56 m | 9 December 2015 | Max Aicher Arena, Inzell | Current world record (unofficial).[3] |