Cycling at the 2004 Summer Olympics – Men's sprint
Men's sprint at the Games of the XXVIII Olympiad | ||||||||||
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Venue | Athens Olympic Velodrome | |||||||||
Dates | 22–24 August | |||||||||
Competitors | 19 from 13 nations | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
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Cycling at the 2004 Summer Olympics | ||
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Road cycling | ||
Road race | men | women |
Time trial | men | women |
Track cycling | ||
Track time trial | men | women |
Individual pursuit | men | women |
Team pursuit | men | |
Sprint | men | women |
Team sprint | men | |
Points race | men | women |
Keirin | men | |
Madison | men | |
Mountain biking | ||
Cross-country | men | women |
The men's sprint at the 2004 Summer Olympics (Cycling) was an event that consisted of cyclists making three laps around the track. Only the time for the last 200 metres of the 750 metres covered was counted as official time.[1] There were 19 competitors from 13 nations, with each nation limited to two cyclists.[2] The event was won by Ryan Bayley of Australia, the nation's first victory in the men's sprint after three times coming in second (most recently in 1992). Theo Bos of the Netherlands took silver, the Dutch team's first medal in the event since 1936. René Wolff earned bronze, stretching Germany's podium streak to four Games (five if East Germany is included; cyclists from eastern Germany had been on the podium in the event every Games since 1976 except the boycotted 1984 Games).
Australian Ryan Bayley defeated current world champion, Theo Bos from the Netherlands, when the sprinting gold medal was taken to a third decider race. In the race for the bronze René Wolff from Germany defeated Laurent Gané from France.
Background
[edit]This was the 23rd appearance of the event, which has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1904 and 1912. Three of the quarterfinalists from 2000 returned: fourth-place finisher Laurent Gané of France, sixth-place finisher José Antonio Villanueva of Spain, and seventh-place finisher Sean Eadie of Australia. Three recent world champions were competing: Gané (2003, also runner-up in 2000, 2001, and 2004), Eadie (2002), and Theo Bos of the Netherlands (2004). René Wolff of Germany and Ryan Bayley of Australia were also significant contenders, each having reached the podium at world championships.[2]
For the second consecutive Games, no nations made their debut in the men's sprint. France made its 23rd appearance, the only nation to have competed at every appearance of the event.
Competition format
[edit]This sprint competition involved a series of head-to-head matches along with the new qualifying round of time trials. There were five main match rounds, with two one-round repechages.[2][3]
- Qualifying round: Each of the 19 competitors completed a 200-metre flying time trial (reaching full speed before timing started for the last 200 metres). The top 18 advanced to the match rounds, seeded based on their time in the qualifying round. With only 19 riders starting, only the slowest cyclist was eliminated; however, one of the qualified riders withdrew, and the 19th-placed rider moved up to 18th and qualified.
- Round 1: The 18 cyclists were seeded into 9 heats of 2 cyclists each. The winner of each heat advanced to the 1/8 finals (9 cyclists) while the other cyclists went to the first repechage (9 cyclists).
- First repechage: The 9 cyclists were divided into 3 heats, each with 3 cyclists. The winner of each heat advanced to the 1/8 finals (3 cyclists) while the losers were eliminated (6 cyclists).
- 1/8 finals: The 12 remaining cyclists competed in a 1/8 finals round. There were 6 heats in this round, with 2 cyclists in each. The winner in each heat advanced to the quarterfinals (6 cyclists), while the loser in each heat went to the second repechage (6 cyclists).
- Second repechage: This round featured 2 heats, with 3 cyclists each. The winner of each heat advanced to the quarterfinals (2 cyclists); the losers competed in a ninth-twelfth classification race.
- Quarterfinals: Beginning with the quarterfinals, all matches were one-on-one competitions and were held in best-of-three format. There were 4 quarterfinals, with the winner of each advancing to the semifinals and the loser going to the fifth-eighth classification race.
- Semifinals: The two semifinals provided for advancement to the gold medal final for winners and to the bronze medal final for losers.
- Finals: Both a gold medal final and a bronze medal final were held, as well as a classification final for fifth through eighth places for quarterfinal losers.
Records
[edit]The records for the sprint are 200 metre flying time trial records, kept for the qualifying round in later Games as well as for the finish of races.
World record | Curt Harnett (CAN) | 9.865 | Bogotá, Colombia | 28 September 1995 |
Olympic record | Gary Neiwand (AUS) | 10.129 | Atlanta, United States | 24 July 1996 |
No new world or Olympic records were set during the competition.
Schedule
[edit]All times are Greece Standard Time (UTC+2)
Date | Time | Round |
---|---|---|
Sunday, 22 August 2004 | 9:15 16:50 17:30 18:00 18:50 | Qualifying round Round 1 First repechage 1/8 finals Second repechage |
Monday, 23 August 2004 | 17:05 | Quarterfinals |
Tuesday, 24 August 2004 | 16:40 17:15 18:30 18:40 | Semifinals Classification 9–12 Final Bronze medal match Classification 5–8 |
Results
[edit]Qualifying round
[edit]Times and average speeds are listed. Q denotes qualification for the next round.
After Tomohiro Nagatsuka dropped out of competition following the round, all of the cyclists following him advanced one position. This allowed Stefan Nimke to compete in the first round despite having originally placed 19th.
Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Speed km/h | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ryan Bayley | Australia | 10.177 | 70.747 | Q |
2 | Theo Bos | Netherlands | 10.214 | 70.491 | Q |
3 | René Wolff | Germany | 10.230 | 70.381 | Q |
4 | Mickaël Bourgain | France | 10.264 | 70.148 | Q |
5 | Laurent Gané | France | 10.271 | 70.100 | Q |
6 | Ross Edgar | Great Britain | 10.381 | 69.357 | Q |
7 | Damian Zieliński | Poland | 10.441 | 68.958 | Q |
8 | José Antonio Villanueva | Spain | 10.446 | 68.925 | Q |
9 | Sean Eadie | Australia | 10.454 | 68.873 | Q |
10 | Łukasz Kwiatkowski | Poland | 10.462 | 68.820 | Q |
11 | Josiah Ng | Malaysia | 10.515 | 68.473 | Q |
12 | Teun Mulder | Netherlands | 10.565 | 68.149 | Q |
13 | Barry Forde | Barbados | 10.597 | 67.943 | Q |
14 | Tomohiro Nagatsuka | Japan | 10.646 | 67.631 | Q, withdrew |
15 | Kim Chi-beom | South Korea | 10.673 | 67.459 | Q |
16 | Jaroslav Jeřábek | Slovakia | 10.758 | 66.926 | Q |
17 | Yang Hui-cheon | South Korea | 10.955 | 65.723 | Q |
18 | Alois Kaňkovský | Czech Republic | 10.956 | 65.717 | Q |
19 | Stefan Nimke | Germany | 11.338 | 63.503 | q |
Round 1
[edit]The first round consisted of nine heats of two riders each. Winners advanced to the next round, losers competed in the 1/16 repechage.
Heat 1
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ryan Bayley | Australia | 10.510 | Q |
2 | Stefan Nimke | Germany | R |
Heat 2
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Theo Bos | Netherlands | 10.799 | Q |
2 | Alois Kaňkovský | Czech Republic | R |
Heat 3
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | René Wolff | Germany | 11.104 | Q |
2 | Yang Hee-Chun | Korea | R |
Heat 4
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Mickaël Bourgain | France | 10.988 | Q |
2 | Jaroslav Jeřábek | Slovakia | R |
Heat 5
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Laurent Gané | France | 11.166 | Q |
2 | Kim Chi-Bum | Korea | R |
Heat 6
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ross Edgar | Great Britain | 10.768 | Q |
2 | Barry Forde | Barbados | R |
Heat 7
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Damian Zieliński | Poland | 10.833 | Q |
2 | Teun Mulder | Netherlands | R |
Heat 8
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Jose Villanueva | Spain | 11.234 | Q |
2 | Josiah Ng | Malaysia | R |
Heat 9
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sean Eadie | Australia | 11.025 | Q |
2 | Łukasz Kwiatkowski | Poland | R |
First repechage
[edit]The nine defeated cyclists from the 1/16 round took part in the 1/16 repechage. They raced in three heats of three riders each. The winner of each heat rejoined the nine victors of the 1/16 round in advancing to the 1/8 round
First repechage heat 1
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Speed km/h | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Barry Forde | Barbados | 10.731 | 67.095 | Q |
2 | Łukasz Kwiatkowski | Poland | |||
3 | Stefan Nimke | Germany |
First repechage heat 2
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Speed km/h | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Teun Mulder | Netherlands | 10.740 | 67.039 | Q |
2 | Kim Chi-Bum | South Korea | |||
3 | Alois Kaňkovský | Czech Republic |
First repechage heat 3
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Speed km/h | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Josiah Ng | Malaysia | 11.006 | 65.418 | Q |
2 | Yang Hee-Chun | South Korea | |||
3 | Jaroslav Jeřábek | Slovakia |
1/8 finals
[edit]The 1/8 round consisted of six matches, each pitting two of the twelve remaining cyclists against each other. The winners advanced to the quarterfinals, with the losers getting another chance in the 1/8 repechage.
1/8 final 1
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ryan Bayley | Australia | 10.520 | Q |
2 | Josiah Ng | Malaysia | R |
1/8 final 2
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Theo Bos | Netherlands | 11.164 | Q |
2 | Teun Mulder | Netherlands | R |
1/8 final 3
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | René Wolff | Germany | 10.548 | Q |
2 | Barry Forde | Barbados | R |
1/8 final 4
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Mickaël Bourgain | France | 10.936 | Q |
2 | Sean Eadie | Australia | R |
1/8 final 5
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Laurent Gané | France | 10.772 | Q |
2 | Jose Villanueva | Spain | R |
1/8 final 6
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Damian Zieliński | Poland | 10.848 | Q |
2 | Ross Edgar | Great Britain | R |
Second repechage
[edit]The six cyclists defeated in the 1/8 round competed in the 1/8 repechage. Two heats of three riders were held. Winners rejoined the victors from the 1/8 round and advanced to the quarterfinals. The four other riders competed in the 9th through 12th place classification.
Second repechage heat 1
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Speed km/h | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ross Edgar | Great Britain | 10.906 | 66.018 | Q |
2 | Josiah Ng | Malaysia | C | ||
3 | Sean Eadie | Australia | C |
Second repechage heat 2
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m | Speed km/h | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Barry Forde | Barbados | 11.294 | 63.750 | Q |
2 | Teun Mulder | Netherlands | C | ||
3 | Jose Villanueva | Spain | REL | C |
Quarterfinals
[edit]The eight riders that had advanced to the quarterfinals competed pairwise in four matches. Each match consisted of two races, with a potential third race being used as a tie-breaker if each cyclist won one of the first two races. All four quarterfinals matches were decided without a third race. Winners advanced to the semifinals, losers competed in a 5th to 8th place classification.
Quarterfinal 1
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Race 1 | Race 2 | Race 3 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ryan Bayley | Australia | 10.733 | 10.807 | — | Q |
2 | Barry Forde | Barbados | — | C |
Quarterfinal 2
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Race 1 | Race 2 | Race 3 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Theo Bos | Netherlands | 11.024 | 10.905 | — | Q |
2 | Ross Edgar | Great Britain | — | C |
Quarterfinal 3
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Race 1 | Race 2 | Race 3 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | René Wolff | Germany | 10.556 | 10.749 | — | Q |
2 | Damian Zieliński | Poland | — | C |
Quarterfinal 4
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Race 1 | Race 2 | Race 3 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Laurent Gané | France | 11.018 | 10.876 | — | Q |
2 | Mickaël Bourgain | France | — | C |
Semifinals
[edit]The four riders that had advanced to the semifinals competed pairwise in two matches. Each match consisted of two races, with a potential third race being used as a tie-breaker if each cyclist won one of the first two races. Both semifinals matches were decided without a third race. Winners advanced to the finals, losers competed in the bronze medal match.
Semifinal 1
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Race 1 | Race 2 | Race 3 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ryan Bayley | Australia | 10.546 | 10.638 | — | Q |
2 | Laurent Gané | France | — | B |
Semifinal 2
[edit]Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Race 1 | Race 2 | Race 3 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Theo Bos | Netherlands | 10.502 | 10.639 | — | Q |
2 | René Wolff | Germany | — | B |
Finals
[edit]Classification 9-12
[edit]The 9-12 classification was a single race with all four riders that had lost in the 1/8 repechage taking place. The winner of the race received 9th place, with the others taking the three following places in order.
Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m |
---|---|---|---|
9 | Jose Villanueva | Spain | 11.063 |
10 | Teun Mulder | Netherlands | |
11 | Josiah Ng | Malaysia | |
12 | Sean Eadie | Australia |
Classification 5-8
[edit]The 5-8 classification was a single race with all four riders that had lost in the quarterfinals taking place. The winner of the race received 5th place, with the others taking the three following places in order.
Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time 200 m |
---|---|---|---|
5 | Ross Edgar | Great Britain | 11.214 |
6 | Barry Forde | Barbados | |
7 | Damian Zieliński | Poland | |
8 | Mickaël Bourgain | France |
Bronze medal match
[edit]The bronze medal match was contested in a set of three races, with the winner of two races declared the winner. Since René Wolff won both of the first two races, the third was not run.
Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Race 1 | Race 2 | Race 3 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
René Wolff | Germany | 10.677 | 10.612 | — | |
4 | Laurent Gané | France | — |
Final
[edit]The final was a best-of-three match. Bos took a lead in the series when he won the first race, but Bayley defeated him in the second race. The third race was decisive and Bayley came out on top again.
Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Race 1 | Race 2 | Race 3 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ryan Bayley | Australia | 10.661 | 10.743 | ||
Theo Bos | Netherlands | 10.710 |
Final classification
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Cycling at the 2004 Athens Summer Games: Men's Sprint". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
- ^ a b c "Sprint, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
- ^ Official Report, Results Book for Track Cycling.