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  2. Riedell Skates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riedell_Skates

    Riedell Shoe Inc. was founded in Red Wing, Minnesota, United States, in 1945 by a former Red Wing Shoes employee. [1] The founder, Paul Riedell , [ 2 ] wanted to design widely available and affordable ice skates.

  3. Speed skating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_skating

    Speed skates Speed skates differ greatly from hockey skates and figure skates. Unlike hockey skates and figure skates, speed skates cut off at the ankle and are built more like a shoe than a boot to allow for more ankle compression. The blades range in length from 30 to 45 cm depending on the age and height of the skater.

  4. List of speed skaters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_speed_skaters

    The following is a list of notable ice speed skaters. The list is sorted by speed skating discipline ( long-track or short-track ), gender and competing nationality. Long-track

  5. Inline speed skating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inline_speed_skating

    European Inline Speed Skating junior championships in the Netherlands, 2004 Road race Berlin 2017. Inline speed skating is the roller sport of racing on inline skates.The sport may also be called inline racing or speed skating by participants.

  6. List of Olympic medalists in speed skating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Olympic_medalists...

    In 2006, Canadian Cindy Klassen became the only other speed skater, and one of seven Winter Olympians, to win five medals—one gold, two silver, two bronze—at a single edition of the Games. [5] Pechstein, American Bonnie Blair, and Sven Kramer of the Netherlands are the only speed skaters to win gold in the same event three times in a row.

  7. Long-track speed skating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long-track_speed_skating

    It was iron-bladed skates that led to the spread of skating and, in particular, speed skating. By 1642, the first official skating club, The Skating Club Of Edinburgh, was born, and, in 1763, the world saw its first official speed skating race, at Wisbech on the Fens in England for a prize sum of 70 guineas .