Adelskalender (skating)


The Adelskalender in skating is a ranking for long track speed skating based on skaters' all-time personal records for certain distances. As in samalog competitions, the skater's time for each distance is divided in 500 metre averages, truncated to 3 decimal places, and the results are then added up – the lower the sum, the better. The samalog system was introduced in 1928 in Norway, replacing ranking points in the traditional 4 distance championships, and can also be used to reconstruct scores based on personal records that were set before the samalog system was invented.
The classical Adelskalender consists of the Allround Championships distances:
Similar rankings in many other combinations are maintained by enthusiasts and available on the Internet.

Calculation

As an example, the points for the current leader in the men's Adelskalendern ranking Patrick Roest are calculated as follows:
DistanceTimeSecondsDivided byPoints
500m35.7435.74135.74
1500m1:42.56102.56334.187
5000m6:03.70363.701036.370
10000m12:42.97767.892038.148
Total144.444

Caveats

The Adelskalender score is calculated over a skater's entire career and not for a single tournament. Theoretically, this would make it possible for a skater to lead the Adelskalender without ever having set a 4 distance championships samalog record, or even having won - or participated in - such a tournament.
Speed skating records have improved dramatically over the years due to a combination of larger participation, introduction of professionalism, improvements in training and selection, and, especially, technical developments, distorting the comparative accomplishments of skaters over time. For comparison, the ranking leader on 1 January 1900 had a score of 202.226, "averaging" 35.6 km/h. In 1925 Oscar Mathisen led with 192.860, in 1950 Åke Seyffarth led with 188.678, in 1975 Ard Schenk led with 166.241, and in 2000 Rintje Ritsma led with 150.720.
Among major technical developments were the introduction of artificial 400 m ovals, the first opening in Gothenburg in 1958, aerodynamics suits in 1976, indoor, climate-controlled ovals in 1986, and the clap skate in 1996. Also, over time, more high altitude skating rinks have been built; the lower air pressure at higher altitude greatly benefits the skater's speed -the rule of thumb is 0.1 points at each distance for every 100 m of increased altitude- and world records generally are set at high altitude.
Even the ranking points of concurrent skaters can be strongly affected by the opportunity skaters have to train and compete on fast rinks. For example, before the 1960s, skaters were dependent on long periods of frost, less common at more southerly latitudes. The effect of access to high altitude rinks was especially notable from 1973 to 1986, when most world records were set at Medeo in Kazakhstan, a rink at 1,691 m that also enjoyed an unusual all-around tailwind, but was rarely accessible to non-Soviet skaters. In 1977–78, the Adelskalender top 10 consisted almost entirely of times set at Medeo, while several skaters in the top 10 never reached the podium at international meets. Currently, the two fastest speed skating rinks are, by a long way, the high altitude covered ovals at Calgary and Salt Lake City, both in North America. Indeed, after the 2014–15 season, 65 of the last 67 new world distance records and the 264 best times ever on the men's 1000 m were recorded at one of these two venues.

Current Adelskalenders

Men

This table is correct as of 15 February 2020. Times in bold are the current world records at that distance. For comparison: the world record big combination is 145.561, by Patrick Roest.
PosNameCountry500 m1500 m5000 m10000 mSamalog
1Patrick RoestNED35.741:42.566:03.7012:42.97144.444
2Shani DavisUSA34.781:41.046:10.4913:05.94144.806
3Sven KramerNED36.171:43.546:03.3212:38.89144.959
4Chad HedrickUSA35.521:42.146:09.6812:55.11145.289
5Sverre Lunde PedersenNOR35.851:42.396:07.1612:56.91145.541
6Håvard BøkkoNOR35.751:42.676:09.9412:53.89145.661
7Ted-Jan BloemenCAN36.871:44.916:01.8612:36.30145.841
8Denis YuskovRUS35.421.41.026.11.7913.12.49145.896
9Koen VerweijNED35.641:41.636:09.5113:08.97145.915
10Ivan SkobrevRUS35.901:42.946:08.7712:58.36146.008

Women

This table is correct as of 15 February 2020. Times in bold are the current world records at that distance. For comparison: the world record small combination is 154.580, by Cindy Klassen.
PosNameCountry500 m1500 m3000 m5000 mSamalog
1Cindy KlassenCAN37.511:51.793:53.346:48.97154.560
2Miho TakagiJPN37.221:49.833:57.097:02.72155.617
3Martina SáblíkováCZE39.231:53.443:52.026:41.18155.831
4Ireen WüstNED38.441:50.703:58.016:54.28156.436
5Ivanie BlondinCAN38.831:51.763:57.566:48.98156.568
6Anni Friesinger-Postma GER37.771:53.093:58.526:58.39157.058
7Natalia VoroninaRUS39.661:55.583:54.066:39.02157.098
8Claudia PechsteinGER38.991:54.313:57.356:46.91157.342
9Kristina GrovesCAN38.751:53.183:58.016:54.55157.616
10Carlijn Achtereekte NED39.251:53.933:54.926:49.81157.360