Cycling at the 2004 Summer Olympics – Men's team sprint

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Cycling at the
2004 Summer Olympics
Road cycling
Cycling (road) pictogram.svg
Road race   men   women
Time trial men women
Track cycling
Cycling (track) pictogram.svg
Individual pursuit men women
Team pursuit men
Sprint men women
Team sprint men
Time trial men women
Points race men women
Keirin men
Madison men
Mountain biking
Cycling (mountain biking) pictogram.svg
Cross-country men women

The men's team sprint event in cycling at the 2004 Summer Olympics was contested by twelve teams. The competition took place on August 21 at the Olympic Velodrome at the Athens Olympic Sports Complex.

Contents

[edit] Medalists

Gold  Jens Fiedler, Stefan Nimke, and René Wolff
Germany (GER)
Silver  Toshiaki Fushimi, Masaki Inoue, and Tomohiro Nagatsuka
Japan (JPN)
Bronze  Mickaël Bourgain, Laurent Gané, and Arnaud Tournant
France (FRA)

[edit] Results

[edit] Qualifying round

The twelve teams of three riders raced the course without competition in the qualifying round. The top eight qualified for the first round, while the bottom four received final rankings based on their times in the qualifying round.

Rank Team Riders Time
1 France Mickaël Bourgain, Laurent Gané, Arnaud Tournant  44.179 Q 
2 Germany Jens Fiedler, Stefan Nimke, René Wolff  44.251 Q
3 Japan Toshiaki Fushimi, Masaki Inoue, Tomohiro Nagatsuka  44.355 Q
4 Spain José Antonio Escuredo, Salvador Melia, Jose Villanueva  44.452 Q
5 Australia Ryan Bayley, Sean Eadie, Shane Kelly  44.512 Q
6 Netherlands Jan Bos, Theo Bos, Teun Mulder  44.539 Q
7 Great Britain Chris Hoy, Craig MacLean, Jamie Staff  44.693 Q
8 Greece Georgios Cheimonetos, Dimitrios Georgalis, Labros Vasilopoulos  44.986 Q
9 Poland Rafał Furman, Łukasz Kwiatkowski, Damian Zieliński  45.093
10 Cuba Reinier Cartaya, Julio César Herrera, Ahmed López  45.548
11 United States Adam Duvendeck, Giddeon Massie, Christian Stahl  45.742
12 Slovakia Peter Bazálik, Jaroslav Jeřábek, Ján Lepka  45.978

[edit] First round

In the first round of match competition, teams raced head-to-head. The two fastest winners advanced to the finals, the other two winners competed for the bronze medal and fourth place, and losers received final rankings (fifth through eight places) based on their times in the round. In this round, Great Britain had the second fastest time overall, but lost their match to Germany and therefore did not advance to the medal round.

Heat Team Time Rank
1 Australia  44.320  4
Spain  44.687 7
2 Japan  44.081 2
Netherlands  44.370 6
3 Germany  43.955 1
Great Britain  44.075 5
4 France  44.128 3
Greece  45.708 8

[edit] Medal round

Match Team Time Rank
Bronze France  44.359  3
Australia  44.404 4
Gold Germany  43.980 1
Japan  44.246 2

[edit] Final classification

The final classification was[1]

  1.  Germany (GER)
  2.  Japan (JPN)
  3.  France (FRA)
  4.  Australia (AUS)
  5.  Great Britain (GBR)
  6.  Netherlands (NED)
  7.  Spain (ESP)
  8.  Greece (GRE)
  9.  Poland (POL)
  10.  Cuba (CUB)
  11.  United States (USA)
  12.  Slovakia (SVK)

[edit] References

General
Specific
Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages