Cycling at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's individual road race

The men's road race, one of the cycling events at the 2012 Olympic Games in London, took place on 28 July at 10 a.m. in central and southwest London and north Surrey,[2] starting and finishing on The Mall.[3]

Men's cycling road race
at the Games of the XXX Olympiad
Alexander Vinokourov leading the breakaway group in the men's road race, approximately 10 km from the finish line on The Mall.
VenueCentral and southwest London and north Surrey[1]
250 km (155.3 mi)
Date28 July 2012
Competitors144 from 63 nations
Winning time5:45:57
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Alexander Vinokourov Kazakhstan
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Rigoberto Urán Colombia
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Alexander Kristoff Norway
← 2008
2016 →

This was the 19th appearance of the event, previously held in 1896 and then at every Summer Olympics since 1936. It replaced the individual time trial event that had been held from 1912 to 1932; the time trial had been re-introduced in 1996 alongside the road race

Samuel Sánchez of Spain would have been the defending champion, but due to an injury incurred at the 2012 Tour de France he could not compete.[4]

The race was won by Kazakhstan's Alexander Vinokourov. He sprinted clear of Colombia's Rigoberto Urán, who claimed the silver medal. Alexander Kristoff of Norway won the sprint from the following group to take bronze.[5] Vinokourov was the first man (and, through the 2016 Games, only; multiple women have done so) to win multiple medals in the event; he had previously taken silver in 2000.

Qualification edit

The top ten ranked countries in the final standings of the 2011 UCI World Tour qualified to have five riders to represent their respective country in the race. The nations with five-man squads were: Spain, Belgium, Italy, Australia, Great Britain, Germany, Netherlands, United States and Switzerland; although Luxembourg placed ninth in the rankings, their roster was reduced to two men. Of the other nations on the World Tour, France and Denmark had four riders, Norway and Ireland three, Kazakhstan two and Slovakia, Costa Rica and Latvia one rider each. The top six countries on the UCI Europe Tour – Slovenia, Russia, Portugal, Poland, Turkey and Belarus – in addition to Colombia, Venezuela, Brazil, the UCI America Tour top three, UCI Asia Tour leaders Iran and UCI Africa Tour leaders Morocco, had three riders. The remaining nations in the race were represented by either two or one rider. Eritrea, Georgia, and Syria competed in the event for the first time. There were a total of 144 participants.

Pre-race favourites edit

The Belfast Telegraph columnist The Punter considered the 2011 World Road Race champion, Mark Cavendish of Great Britain to be the favourite for the race,[6] although his chances were likely dependent on whether the race ended in a sprint finish.[7][failed verification] Cavendish was expected to be greatly assisted by his four-man British team which he labelled his 'dream team' prior to the race and regarded by Bradley Wiggins as 'possibly the strongest fielded in an Olympic road race'.[8][9] The race did not go as planned as Ian Stannard, David Millar, Chris Froome, and Wiggins all finished beyond 90th place and Cavendish came across in 29th.

Tom Boonen of Belgium, Australia's Matthew Goss, André Greipel of Germany were also tipped as potential winners.[10][failed verification] Other sprinters tipped for Medals included Tour de France points classification winner Peter Sagan of Slovakia and Edvald Boasson Hagen of Norway – but both riders had perceived weaker teams than those of Great Britain, Belgium and Germany.[10][failed verification] If the race was to have ended in a sprint finish, Sagan and Boonen were tipped for victory, along with other classic specialists such as Fabian Cancellara of Switzerland, the silver medalist in 2008, and Philippe Gilbert of Belgium.[citation needed]

The defending champion, Samuel Sánchez of Spain, did not enter the race due to an injury suffered at the 2012 Tour de France.[4]

Course edit

Box Hill was climbed nine times in the race

The race was 250 km (155.3 mi) long and began with a mass start.[11][12] Crowds were bolstered by free entry for 150 km of the 250 km route,[13] recent British success in the 2012 Tour de France and the possibility of the host nation winning its first gold medal of the 2012 Olympics through Mark Cavendish. Originally 3,500 paid tickets were made available for the grandstand area on Box Hill where the cyclists would undertake nine laps, but due to demand this was increased to 15,000 tickets.[13]

Schedule edit

All times are British Summer Time (UTC+1)

DateTimeRound
Saturday, 28 July 201210:00Final

Results edit

The peloton as it passed Putney in Southwest London early in the race, en route to Box Hill.
The race going through Teddington

The entry list was published on 23 July.[14]

In the table below, "s.t." indicates that the rider crossed the finish line in the same group as the cyclist before him, and was therefore credited with the same finishing time.

RankCyclistNationTime
Alexander Vinokourov  Kazakhstan5:45:57
Rigoberto Urán  Colombia
s.t.
Alexander Kristoff  Norway5:46:05
4Taylor Phinney  United States
s.t.
5Sergey Lagutin  Uzbekistan
s.t.
6Stuart O'Grady  Australia
s.t.
7Jürgen Roelandts  Belgium
s.t.
8Grégory Rast  Switzerland
s.t.
9Luca Paolini  Italy
s.t.
10Jack Bauer  New Zealand
s.t.
11Lars Boom  Netherlands
s.t.
12Jakob Fuglsang  Denmark
s.t.
13Rui Costa  Portugal
s.t.
14Luis León Sánchez  Spain
s.t.
15Roman Kreuziger  Czech Republic
s.t.
16Sergio Henao  Colombia
s.t.
17Andriy Hryvko  Ukraine
s.t.
18Alejandro Valverde  Spain
s.t.
19Philippe Gilbert  Belgium
s.t.
20Sylvain Chavanel  France
s.t.
21Janez Brajkovič  Slovenia
s.t.
22Fumiyuki Beppu  Japan
s.t.
23Robert Gesink  Netherlands
s.t.
24Alexandr Kolobnev  Russia
s.t.
25Lars Petter Nordhaug  Norway
s.t.
26Jonathan Castroviejo  Spain5:46:13
27André Greipel  Germany5:46:37
28Tom Boonen  Belgium
s.t.
29Mark Cavendish  Great Britain
s.t.
30Arnaud Démare  France
s.t.
31Francisco Ventoso  Spain
s.t.
32Murilo Fischer  Brazil
s.t.
33Tyler Farrar  United States
s.t.
34Peter Sagan  Slovakia
s.t.
35Andrey Amador  Costa Rica
s.t.
36Bernhard Eisel  Austria
s.t.
37Wong Kam-po  Hong Kong
s.t.
38Elia Viviani  Italy
s.t.
39Héctor Rangel  Mexico
s.t.
40Daryl Impey  South Africa
s.t.
41Radoslav Rogina  Croatia
s.t.
42Matti Breschel  Denmark
s.t.
43Assan Bazayev  Kazakhstan
s.t.
44José Joaquín Rojas  Spain
s.t.
45Miguel Ubeto  Venezuela
s.t.
46Borut Božič  Slovenia
s.t.
47Ramūnas Navardauskas  Lithuania
s.t.
48Yukiya Arashiro  Japan
s.t.
49Manuel Antonio Cardoso  Portugal
s.t.
50Rene Mandri  Estonia
s.t.
51Jackson Rodríguez  Venezuela
s.t.
52Vladimir Isaichev  Russia
s.t.
53Yauheni Hutarovich  Belarus
s.t.
54Ivan Stević  Serbia
s.t.
55David McCann  Ireland
s.t.
56Aleksejs Saramotins  Latvia
s.t.
57Martin Elmiger  Switzerland
s.t.
Nicki Sørensen  Denmark
s.t.
59Gediminas Bagdonas  Lithuania
s.t.
60Michał Kwiatkowski  Poland
s.t.
61Danail Petrov  Bulgaria
s.t.
62Adil Jelloul  Morocco
s.t.
63Ryder Hesjedal  Canada
s.t.
64Laurent Didier  Luxembourg
s.t.
65Jussi Veikkanen  Finland
s.t.
66Dmytro Krivtsov  Ukraine
s.t.
67Arnold Alcolea  Cuba
s.t.
68Kristijan Đurasek  Croatia
s.t.
69Nelson Oliveira  Portugal
s.t.
70Tomás Gil  Venezuela
s.t.
71Lars Bak  Denmark
s.t.
72Gonzalo Garrido  Chile
s.t.
73Daniel Teklehaymanot  Eritrea
s.t.
74Sebastian Langeveld  Netherlands
s.t.
75Jan Bárta  Czech Republic
s.t.
76Gustav Larsson  Sweden
s.t.
77Vegard Laengen  Norway
s.t.
78Branislau Samoilau  Belarus
s.t.
79Grega Bole  Slovenia
s.t.
80Cadel Evans  Australia
s.t.
81Daniel Schorn  Austria
s.t.
82Niki Terpstra  Netherlands
s.t.
83Simon Gerrans  Australia
s.t.
84Maciej Bodnar  Poland
s.t.
85Matthew Goss  Australia
s.t.
86Tony Gallopin  France
s.t.
87Michael Schär  Switzerland
s.t.
88Timmy Duggan  United States
s.t.
89Nicolas Roche  Ireland
s.t.
90Dan Martin  Ireland
s.t.
91Michael Rogers  Australia
s.t.
92Greg Van Avermaet  Belgium
s.t.
93Chris Horner  United States5:46:46
94Ian Stannard  Great Britain5:46:47
95Bert Grabsch  Germany
s.t.
96Michael Albasini  Switzerland
s.t.
97Lieuwe Westra  Netherlands
s.t.
98Denis Menchov  Russia5:46:51
99Sacha Modolo  Italy
s.t.
100Stijn Vandenbergh  Belgium
s.t.
101Vincenzo Nibali  Italy5:46:53
102Marcel Sieberg  Germany5:47:08
103Bradley Wiggins  Great Britain5:47:14
104Tejay van Garderen  United States5:47:31
105John Degenkolb  Germany5:48:49
106Fabian Cancellara  Switzerland5:51:40
107Marco Pinotti  Italy5:54:04
108David Millar  Great Britain5:55:16
109Chris Froome  Great Britain5:58:24
110Ioannis Tamouridis  Greece
s.t.
Maximiliano Richeze  ArgentinaOTL
Byron Guamá  EcuadorOTL
Mehdi Sohrabi  IranOTL
Gabor Kasa  SerbiaOTL
Ahmet Akdilek  TurkeyOTL
Gregolry Panizo  BrazilDNF
Edvald Boasson Hagen  NorwayDNF
Azzedine Lagab  AlgeriaDNF
Spas Gyurov  BulgariaDNF
Muhamad Othman  MalaysiaDNF
Miraç Kal  TurkeyDNF
Kemal Küçükbay  TurkeyDNF
Muradjan Khalmuratov  UzbekistanDNF
Magno Nazaret  BrazilDNF
Tony Martin  GermanyDNF
Krisztián Lovassy  HungaryDNF
Amir Rusli  MalaysiaDNF
Oleg Berdos  MoldovaDNF
Michał Gołaś  PolandDNF
Andrei Nechita  RomaniaDNF
Vasil Kiryienka  BelarusDNF
Alireza Haghi  IranDNF
Greg Henderson  New ZealandDNF
Giorgi Nadiradze  GeorgiaDNF
Park Sung-Baek  South KoreaDNF
Soufiane Haddi  MoroccoDNF
Manuel Rodas  GuatemalaDNF
Dan Craven  NamibiaDNF
Mouhssine Lahsaini  MoroccoDNF
Omar Hasanin  SyriaDNF
Jorge Soto  UruguayDNF
Fabio Duarte  ColombiaDNF
Mickaël Bourgain  FranceDNF
Amir Zargari  IranDNF
Over time limit (OTL)
Under UCI regulations for one-day road races (article 2.3.039), "Any rider finishing in a time exceeding that of the winner by more than 5% shall not be placed".[15] Applying this to the winning time of Alexander Vinokourov resulted in a time limit of 6 hours, 3 minutes and 14 seconds.

References edit

  1. ^ "Olympic road race route officially revealed". Cycling Weekly. 10 February 2011. Retrieved 13 July 2012. This extends the Games into the South West of London and Surrey
  2. ^ "Olympic sport competition schedule". London 2012. Archived from the original on 4 December 2012. Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  3. ^ "The Mall | Venues". London 2012. Archived from the original on 4 December 2012. Retrieved 25 October 2011.
  4. ^ a b Elkington, Mark (19 July 2012). "Road race champion Sanchez out of Games". Reuters. Archived from the original on 8 December 2012. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
  5. ^ "Vinokurov claims Road Race gold". London 2012. 28 July 2012. Archived from the original on 6 December 2012. Retrieved 28 July 2012.
  6. ^ "The Punter: Gold opportunity for Bradley Wiggins and Mark Cavendish". Belfast Telegraph. 26 July 2012. Retrieved 27 July 2012.
  7. ^ Richard Williams (22 July 2012). "Tour de France 2012: Mark Cavendish wins fourth Champs Elysées sprint". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
  8. ^ "London 2012: Mark Cavendish hails the GB 'dream team'". BBC Sport. 26 July 2012. Retrieved 27 July 2012.
  9. ^ Gallagher, Brendan (26 July 2012). "London 2012 Olympics: Mark Cavendish and his dream team leave their strategy for Olympic road race in no doubt". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 27 July 2012.
  10. ^ a b Fotheringham, William (27 July 2012). "Mark Cavendish: Thinking outside the box for Team GB at London 2012". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 July 2012.
  11. ^ "Olympic Cycling – Road – Information, History, Rules". London 2012. Archived from the original on 9 December 2012. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
  12. ^ "Road Race format competition". London 2012. Archived from the original on 10 September 2012. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  13. ^ a b "More spectators will enjoy best views of Olympic Cycling Road Race". 25 January 2012. Archived from the original on 4 January 2013. Retrieved 27 July 2012.
  14. ^ "London 2012 Olympic Games: Men's road race start list". cyclingweekly.co.uk. 23 July 2012. Archived from the original on 6 August 2012. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
  15. ^ UCI Cycling Regulations, Part II: Road Races, UCI, 1 February 2012, p. 31