Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q713756> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 43 of
43
with 100 triples per page.
- Q713756 subject Q13279241.
- Q713756 subject Q5312304.
- Q713756 subject Q7019787.
- Q713756 subject Q7076715.
- Q713756 subject Q7806565.
- Q713756 subject Q8468181.
- Q713756 subject Q9700833.
- Q713756 abstract "Pavel Georgievich Pegov (Russian: Павел Георгиевич Пегов) (born 29 November 1956 in Moscow, Russian SFSR) is a former speed skater who specialised in the shorter 500 metres and 1000 metres distances. He studied at the East Siberian Technological Institute and trained with Nina Bobrova, and later at the Armed Forces sports society. He peaked in 1983 when he broke four world records. Skating for the Soviet Union, Pavel Pegov finished second behind Japanese skater Akira Kuroiwa at the World Sprint Championships of 1983. In March that year, on the Medeo rink at Alma-Ata, he broke Yevgeny Kulikov's two-year-old world record on the 500 m. On the 25th of that month, he clocked 36.68, and a day later he sharpened the record to 36.57. That same weekend, he raced a perfect 1000 m – setting a legendary world record time of 1:12.58. He was the first speed skater to skate the 1000 m in less than 1 minute and 13 seconds and, although Igor Zhelezovski managed to equal this time six years later, Pegov's world record would stand undefeated for over ten years; Kevin Scott clocked 1:12.54 in Calgary 19 December 1993. His four Medeo races of 36.68, 1:12.58, 36.57, and 1:14.83 gave him another world record – the sprint combination samalogue point sum 146.955. This record lasted until Igor Zhelezovski very narrowly improved it to 146.945 in Heerenveen in February 1989. Pegov never regained his eminence after 1983, finishing only 13th in the 1000 m at the 1984 Winter Olympics. A few weeks after the Olympics, he finished second, behind Sergey Khlebnikov, at the Soviet Sprint Championships. Pegov retired as an elite speed skater in 1985.".
- Q713756 wikiPageExternalLink 0,11040,4844-181536-198754-94643-0-file,00.pdf.
- Q713756 wikiPageExternalLink index.php?file=skater&code=1956112901.
- Q713756 wikiPageExternalLink index.php?name=PEGOV&fname=Pavel&nat=URS&lm=m.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q1054871.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q1054882.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q1199329.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q1267921.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q13279241.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q1370841.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q15180.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q17.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q192431.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q1976870.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q2031641.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q2184.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q248454.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q35493.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q355476.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q36312.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q4792966.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q5312304.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q574558.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q6397455.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q649.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q688615.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q7019787.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q7076715.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q7806565.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q8468181.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q864796.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q961097.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q9657.
- Q713756 wikiPageWikiLink Q9700833.
- Q713756 comment "Pavel Georgievich Pegov (Russian: Павел Георгиевич Пегов) (born 29 November 1956 in Moscow, Russian SFSR) is a former speed skater who specialised in the shorter 500 metres and 1000 metres distances. He studied at the East Siberian Technological Institute and trained with Nina Bobrova, and later at the Armed Forces sports society. He peaked in 1983 when he broke four world records.".
- Q713756 label "Pavel Pegov".