SkipNavigation

Events
In speed skating -- one of six sports to have been a part of every Olympic Winter Games -- athletes race over artificial ice at speeds up to 60 km/hr (37mph). Athletes often skate in a hunched position to reduce air resistance.

Two athletes skate in each race, but they are competing against the clock and not each other. Each competitor is assigned his or her own lane and must skate counter-clockwise around the rink, changing lanes at the crossover point in each lap.

The skater with the fastest time of all competitors wins the event. In the 500m, the athlete with the fastest total time from both races wins.

Twelve events are being competed at the 2010 Vancouver Games. With noted exceptions, all events are contested by both men and women:

Distance

Laps

Start position

Finish line location

500m

1 ¼

Even

End of finish straight

1000m

2 ½

Staggered

Middle of the finish straight

1500m

3 ¾

Staggered

End of finish straight

3000m (W)

7 ½

Staggered

End of finish straight

5000m

12 ½

Staggered

End of finish straight

10,000m (M)

25

Staggered

End of finish straight

Team pursuit (M)

8

Middle of opposite straights

Middle of straights

Team pursuit (W)

6

Middle of opposite straights

Middle of straights

The team pursuit made its Olympic debut at the 2006 Torino Games. Competed like the team pursuit event in cycling, speed skating's pursuit is made up of three skaters on each squad who race against one other team in a single lane. The two teams start at the same time at each side of the track. Each team is timed from the start until the third skater crosses the finish line.

Speed Skating - Most Recent

More Speed Skating:
    ©2010 NBC Universal. All rights reserved. Any use, reproduction, modification, distribution, display or performance of this material without NBC Universal's prior written consent is prohibited.