Speed skating at the 2018 Winter Olympics – Women's 500 metres

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Women's 500 metres
at the XXIII Olympic Winter Games
VenueGangneung Oval, Gangneung, South Korea
Date18 February
Competitors31 from 18 nations
Winning time36.94 OR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Nao Kodaira  Japan
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Lee Sang-hwa  South Korea
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Karolína Erbanová  Czech Republic
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2022 →

The women's 500 metres speed skating competition of the 2018 Winter Olympics was held on 18 February 2018 at Gangneung Oval in Gangneung.[1][2]

Summary

Pre-race favourites were Nao Kodaira, winner of every single pre-Olympic ISU World Cup 500m in the 2017/18 season,[3] and Lee Sang-hwa, world record holder at this distance and two-time Olympic 500m gold medallist.

Skating in the fourth pair, Jorien Ter Mors posted a time of 37.53, which stood until Brittany Bowe improved it by 0.009 seconds in the eleventh pair. Starting in pair 16 versus Karolína Erbanová, Japan's Nao Kodaira raced to an Olympic and sea-level record of 36.94, clocking an unprecedented lap time of 26.68 - a pace for the longest time deemed "impossible" even at altitude (which Gangneung is not).[4] In pair 15, South Korea's Lee Sang-hwa opened faster than Kodaira and was up two tenths in back straight intermediate timings. However, an imperfect final inner turn saw her lose this advantage and cross the line 0.39 seconds down in 37.33 to take second place - a mere 0.01 seconds ahead of Erbanová's time. Vanessa Herzog, 500m gold medallist at the 2018 European Speed Skating Championships, was unable to challenge for a medal in the final pair, finishing fourth.

Competition schedule

All times are (

UTC+9
).

Date Time Event
18 February 20:56 Women's 500m Final

Records

Prior to this competition, the existing world, Olympic and track records were as follows.

World record  Lee Sang-hwa (KOR) 36.36 Salt Lake City, United States 16 November 2013
Olympic record  Lee Sang-hwa (KOR) 37.28 Sochi, Russia 11 February 2014
Track record  Nao Kodaira (JPN) 37.05 7 February 2018

The following records were set during this competition.

Date Round Athlete Country Time Record
18 February Pair 14 Nao Kodaira  Japan 36.94 OR, WB (sea level), TR

OR = Olympic record, TR = track record, WB = world best

Results

The races were held at 20:56.[5]

Rank Pair Lane Name Country Time Time behind Notes
1st place, gold medalist(s) 14 I Nao Kodaira  Japan 36.94 OR, TR
2nd place, silver medalist(s) 15 O Lee Sang-hwa  South Korea 37.33 +0.39
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 14 O Karolína Erbanová  Czech Republic 37.34 +0.40
4 16 I Vanessa Herzog  Austria 37.51 +0.57
5 11 O Brittany Bowe  United States 37.530 +0.59
6 4 I Jorien ter Mors  Netherlands 37.539 +0.59
7 16 O Angelina Golikova  Olympic Athletes from Russia 37.62 +0.68
8 15 I Arisa Go  Japan 37.67 +0.73
9 13 I Yu Jing  China 37.81 +0.87
10 13 O Marsha Hudey  Canada 37.88 +0.94
11 9 O Heather Bergsma  United States 38.13 +1.19
12 10 O Kim Hyun-yung  South Korea 38.251 +1.31
13 11 I Erina Kamiya  Japan 38.255 +1.31
14 12 O Heather McLean  Canada 38.29 +1.35
15 8 I Zhang Hong  China 38.39 +1.45
16 10 I
Judith Dannhauer
 Germany 38.534 +1.59
16 9 I Kim Min-sun  South Korea 38.534 +1.59
18 12 I Hege Bøkko  Norway 38.538 +1.59
19 1 I Anice Das  Netherlands 38.75 +1.81
20 5 O Tian Ruining  China 38.86 +1.92
21 8 O
Yekaterina Aydova
 Kazakhstan 38.96 +2.02
22 6 O Huang Yu-ting  Chinese Taipei 38.98 +2.04
23 3 I Lotte van Beek  Netherlands 39.18 +2.24
24 2 O Erin Jackson  United States 39.20 +2.26
25 4 O Kaja Ziomek  Poland 39.26 +2.32
26 7 I Yvonne Daldossi  Italy 39.28 +2.34
27 2 I Ida Njåtun  Norway 39.33 +2.39
28 7 O Elina Risku  Finland 39.36 +2.42
29 6 I Francesca Bettrone  Italy 39.52 +2.58
30 5 I Kseniya Sadouskaya  Belarus 39.64 +2.70
31 3 O Alexandra Ianculescu  Romania 40.70 +3.76

References

  1. ^ "Venues". www.pyeongchang2018.com/. Pyeongchang 2018 Olympic Organizing Committee for the 2018 Winter Olympics. Archived from the original on 17 February 2018. Retrieved 26 December 2017.
  2. POCOG. Archived from the original
    on 5 November 2017. Retrieved 15 September 2017.
  3. ^ "ISU RESULTS". www.isuresults.eu. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
  4. ^ "Kodaira, Hirscher en Fourcade pakken goud op dag negen" (in Dutch). Retrieved 2018-02-20.
  5. ^ "Final results" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-02-18. Retrieved 2018-02-18.