Kees Verkerk

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Kees Verkerk Speed ​​skating
Kees Verkerk, 1968
Full name Cornelis Arie Verkerk
nation NetherlandsNetherlands Netherlands
birthday October 28, 1942
place of birth Maasdam
size 1.71 cm
Career
discipline Speed ​​skating
status resigned
Medal table
winter Olympics 1 × gold 3 × silver 0 × bronze
M-World Championship medals 2 × gold 0 × silver 3 × bronze
M-EM medals 1 × gold 2 × silver 1 × bronze
Olympic rings winter Olympics
silver Innsbruck 1964 1500 m
gold Grenoble 1968 1500 m
silver Grenoble 1968 5000 m
silver Sapporo 1972 10,000 m
ISU All around world championships
gold Gothenburg 1966 All-around
gold Oslo 1967 All-around
bronze Deventer 1969 All-around
bronze Oslo 1970 All-around
bronze Gothenburg 1971 All-around
ISU All-around European Championships
silver Deventer 1966 All-around
gold Lahti 1967 All-around
silver Inzell 1969 All-around
bronze Heerenveen 1971 All-around
 

Cornelis Arie "Kees" Verkerk (born October 28, 1942 in Maasdam ) is a former Dutch speed skater .

Career

Kees Verkerk was all-around world champion in Gothenburg in 1966 and in Oslo in 1967 . From 1969 to 1971 he won the bronze medal at the world championships . In 1967 he was also European champion in Oslo .

Verkerk won the silver medal over 1500 meters at the 1964 Olympic Games in Innsbruck . Four years later he was Olympic champion and second over 5000 meters in Grenoble over this distance. In Sapporo , at the end of his Olympic career in 1972, he again won silver over 10,000 meters.

Together with his compatriot Ard Schenk , he founded a professional league in 1973, but it only lasted two years.

Verkerk set eight world records during his playing days . He led the nobility calendar between 1967 and 1971 for 1444 days. Its high was 168.033 points.

He was awarded the Oscar Mathisen Memorial Trophy twice.

Personal bests

route time date place
500 m 39.9 sec 15th January 1971 Davos
1000 m 1: 21.4 min 19th January 1971 Davos
1500 m 1: 58.9 min 16th January 1971 Davos
3000 m 4: 14.9 min March 2nd 1972 Inzell
5000 m 7: 13.2 min-1 March 1, 1969 Inzell
10,000 m 15: 03.6 min-1 January 26, 1969 Inzell

¹ = world record at the time of the run

Web links

Commons : Kees Verkerk  - album with pictures, videos and audio files
Ron Kroon : Kees Verkerk at the EM 1967