Cycling at the 1972 Summer Olympics – Men's individual road race

In cycling at the 1972 Summer Olympics, the men's individual road race was held on 7 September. There were 163 starters from 48 nations.[1] The maximum per NOC was four. A total of 76 cyclists finished the race. The event was won by Hennie Kuiper of the Netherlands, the nation's first victory in the men's individual road race and first medal in the event since 1948. Clyde Sefton earned Australia's first medal in the event with his silver. Jaime Huélamo of Spain finished third, but was disqualified after failing a drug test; the medal was not reassigned.[2][3] Italy missed the podium, breaking a four-Games streak of gold and silver medals.

Men's cycling road race
at the Games of the XX Olympiad
The course
VenueMunich, West Germany
Date7 September 1972
Competitors163 from 48 nations
Winning time4:14:37
Medalists
Hennie Kuiper
 Netherlands
Clyde Sefton
 Australia
Not awarded

Irish protesters

Seven members of the National Cycling Association (NCA) were arrested for disrupting the event. The Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) recognised separate national federations on either side of the Irish political border. The NCA was an Irish Republican all-Ireland body not affiliated to the ICU. Three NCA members delayed the start by distributing leaflets,[4] and the other four joined mid-race to ambush Irish competitor Noel Teggart, causing a minor pile-up.[5]

Background

This was the ninth 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 (and which would be reintroduced alongside the road race in 1996). Freddy Maertens of Belgium was favored; he had finished second to Régis Ovion (also racing in Munich) at the 1971 world championships and won 50 races in 1971 and 1972.[1]

Cameroon, Jamaica, Malawi, and Togo each made their debut in the men's individual road race; East Germany competed separately for the first time. Great Britain made its ninth appearance in the event, the only nation to have competed in each appearance to date.

Competition format and course

The mass-start race was on a 200 kilometre course. It was a "relatively easy and flat" course.[6]

Schedule

All times are Central European Time (UTC+1)

Date Time Round
Thursday, 7 September 197210:00Final

Results

The field was relatively tight until lap 6, when a pack of 35 cyclists broke away to form a lead group. Kuiper made his move in the last lap, gaining significant separation from the pack.[7]

RankCyclistNationTime
Hennie Kuiper Netherlands 4:14:37
Clyde Sefton Australia 4:15:04
DSQ Jaime Huélamo Spain 4:15:04[t 1]
4 Bruce Biddle New Zealand 4:15:04[t 1]
5 Phil Bayton Great Britain + 30"
6 Phil Edwards Great Britain + 30"
7 Wilfried Trott West Germany + 30"
8 Francesco Moser Italy + 36"
9 Miguel Samacá Colombia + 36"
10 Jesús Sarabia Mexico + 36"
11 Piet van Katwijk Netherlands + 36"
12 Cees Priem Netherlands + 36"
13 Freddy Maertens Belgium + 36"
14 Roman Humenberger Austria + 36"
15 Régis Ovion France + 36"
16 Francisco Elorriaga Spain + 36"
17 Tore Milsett Norway + 36"
18 Jiří Prchal Czechoslovakia + 36"
19 Bruno Hubschmid Switzerland + 36"
20 Iwan Schmid Switzerland + 36"
21 Jørgen Marcussen Denmark + 36"
22 Erwin Tischler West Germany + 36"
23 András Takács Hungary + 36"
24 Ueli Sutter Switzerland + 36"
25 Fedor den Hertog Netherlands + 36"
26 Fernando Cruz Colombia + 36"
27 Erny Kirchen Luxembourg + 36"
28 Ove Jensen Denmark + 36"
29 Graeme Jose Australia + 44"
30 Karl-Heinz Oberfranz East Germany + 2' 32"
31 Ryszard Szurkowski Poland + 2' 32"
32 John Trevorrow Australia + 2' 32"
33 Wolfgang Wesemann East Germany + 2' 32"
34 Valery Likhachov Soviet Union + 2' 32"
35 Anatoly Starkov Soviet Union + 2' 32"
36 Lucjan Lis Poland + 2' 32"
37 José Viejo Spain + 2' 32"
38 Liam Horner Ireland + 2' 32"
39 Bernard Bourreau France + 2' 32"
40 Kieron McQuaid Ireland + 2' 32"
41 Jiří Háva Czechoslovakia + 2' 32"
42 Lennart Fagerlund Sweden + 2' 32"
43 Radoš Čubrić Yugoslavia + 2' 32"
44 Sven-Åke Nilsson Sweden + 2' 32"
45 Gustaaf Hermans Belgium + 2' 32"
46 Johann Summer Austria + 2' 32"
47 Petr Matoušek Czechoslovakia + 2' 32"
48 Henning Jørgensen Denmark + 2' 32"
49 Walter Riccomi Italy + 2' 32"
50 Paul Brydon New Zealand + 2' 32"
51 Jože Valenčič Yugoslavia + 2' 32"
52 Brian Chewter Canada + 2' 32"
53 Tekeste Woldu Ethiopia + 2' 32"
54 Tomás Nistal Spain + 2' 32"
55 Wolfgang Steinmayr Austria + 2' 32"
56 Lucien Didier Luxembourg + 2' 32"
57 Alfred Gaida West Germany + 2' 32"
58 Donald Allan Australia + 2' 32"
59 Lucien De Brauwere Belgium + 2' 32"
60 Teodor Vasile Romania + 2' 32"
61 John Howard United States + 2' 32"
62 Tom Morris Canada + 2' 32"
63 John Allis United States + 2' 32"
64 Tibor Debreceni Hungary + 2' 32"
65 Marcel Duchemin France + 2' 32"
66 Juan Morales Colombia + 2' 32"
67 Imre Géra Hungary + 2' 32"
68 Peter Weibel West Germany + 2' 32"
69 Peter Doyle Ireland + 2' 32"
70 Thorleif Andresen Norway + 2' 32"
71 Rudolf Mitteregger Austria + 2' 32"
72 Gilles Durand Canada + 2' 36"
73 Ali Hüryılmaz Turkey + 2' 36"
74 Walter Tardáguila Uruguay + 2' 51"
75 Gregorio Aldo Arencibia Cuba + 4' 17"
76 Stanisław Szozda Poland + 6' 04"
Roberto Breppe ArgentinaDNF
Kensley Reece BarbadosDNF
Hector Edwards BarbadosDNF
Orlando Bates BarbadosDNF
Frans Van Looy BelgiumDNF
Luiz Carlos Flores BrazilDNF
Miguel Silva Júnior BrazilDNF
Lindsay Gauld CanadaDNF
Joseph Evouna CameroonDNF
Joseph Kono CameroonDNF
Nicolas Owona CameroonDNF
Jean Bernard Djambou CameroonDNF
Shue Ming-fa Republic of ChinaDNF
Fabio Acevedo ColombiaDNF
Raúl Marcelo Vázquez CubaDNF
José Prieto CubaDNF
Pedro Rodríguez CubaDNF
Alois Holík CzechoslovakiaDNF
Eigil Sørensen DenmarkDNF
Fisihasion Ghebreyesus EthiopiaDNF
Rissom Gebre Meskei EthiopiaDNF
Suleman Abdul Rahman EthiopiaDNF
Ole Wackström FinlandDNF
Mauno Uusivirta FinlandDNF
Harry Hannus FinlandDNF
Tapani Vuorenhela FinlandDNF
Raymond Martin FranceDNF
Dieter Gonschorek East GermanyDNF
Wolfram Kühn East GermanyDNF
David Lloyd Great BritainDNF
John Clewarth Great BritainDNF
József Peterman HungaryDNF
Noel Teggart IrelandDNF
Aldo Parecchini ItalyDNF
Franco Ongarato ItalyDNF
Howard Fenton JamaicaDNF
Michael Lecky JamaicaDNF
Radcliffe Lawrence JamaicaDNF
Xavier Mirander JamaicaDNF
Tarek Abou Al Dahab LebanonDNF
Paul Kind LiechtensteinDNF
Grimon Langson MalawiDNF
Raphael Kazembe MalawiDNF
Abdul Bahar-ud-Din Rahum MalaysiaDNF
Daud Ibrahim MalaysiaDNF
Omar Haji Saad MalaysiaDNF
Saad Fadzil MalaysiaDNF
Agustín Alcántara MexicoDNF
Francisco Vázquez MexicoDNF
Francisco Huerta MexicoDNF
Robert Oliver New ZealandDNF
Vern Hanaray MalaysiaNZL
Arve Haugen NorwayDNF
Jan Henriksen NorwayDNF
Carlos Espinoza PeruDNF
Enrique Allyón PeruDNF
Fernando Cuenca PeruDNF
Gilberto Chocce PeruDNF
Maximo Junta PhilippinesDNF
Jan Smyrak PolandDNF
Daniele Cesaretti San MarinoDNF
Valery Yardy Soviet UnionDNF
Ivan Trifonov Soviet UnionDNF
Leif Hansson SwedenDNF
Bernt Johansson SwedenDNF
Hugo Schär SwitzerlandDNF
Panya Singprayool-Dinmuong ThailandDNF
Pramote Sangskulrote ThailandDNF
Sataporn Kantasa-Ard ThailandDNF
Sivaporn Ratanapool ThailandDNF
Charles Leodo TogoDNF
Gbedikpe Emmanuel Amouzou TogoDNF
Tompson Mensah TogoDNF
Anthony Sellier Trinidad and TobagoDNF
Clive Saney Trinidad and TobagoDNF
Patrick Gellineau Trinidad and TobagoDNF
Vernon Stauble Trinidad and TobagoDNF
Haluk Günözgen TurkeyDNF
Mevlüt Bora TurkeyDNF
Rıfat Çalışkan TurkeyDNF
Alberto Rodríguez UruguayDNF
Emile Waldteufel United StatesDNF
Robert Schneider United StatesDNF
Jorge Jukich UruguayDNF
Mario Margalef UruguayDNF
Eugen Pleško YugoslaviaDNF
Janez Zakotnik YugoslaviaDNF

Note:

  1.  Jaime Huélamo (ESP) was disqualified after he tested positive for nikethamide (Coramine). Biddle was not awarded the bronze medal as he had not been tested for drugs.

References

Notes

  1. "Road Race, Individual, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  2. "Jaime Huélamo Olympic Results". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 October 2014. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
  3. Historical Dictionary of Cycling By Bill Mallon, Jeroen Heijmans. Scarecrow Press. 2011.
  4. AAP (8 September 1972). "Rebel cyclists sent marching". The Age. Melbourne. p. 15. Retrieved 13 February 2010.
  5. AP (8 September 1972). "7 I.R.A. cyclists 'invade' Olympics; Rebels Say Their Team Is Better Than the Regulars, Then Try to Prove It". New York Times. p. 23, Sports. Retrieved 13 February 2010.
  6. Official Report, vol. 3, p. 211.
  7. Sports-reference
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