Cycling at the 1984 Summer Olympics – Men's individual road race

The men's individual road race at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California, was held on Sunday July 29, 1984. There were 135 participants from 43 nations in the race over 190.20 km, on a course in Mission Viejo, California. The maximum number of cyclists per nation was four. 55 cyclists finished.[1] The event was won by Alexi Grewal of the United States, the nation's first medal in the men's individual road race. All three nations represented on the podium were there for the first time in the event; Canada with Steve Bauer's silver and Norway with Dag Otto Lauritzen's bronze joined the Americans.

Men's road race
at the Games of the XXIII Olympiad
German stamp commemorating Olympic cycling
VenueStreets of Mission Viejo
DateJuly 29
Competitors135 from 43 nations
Winning time4:59:57
Medalists
Alexi Grewal
 United States
Steve Bauer
 Canada
Dag Otto Lauritzen
 Norway

Background

This was the 12th 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). The late 1970s and early 1980s had seen a shift in power in the sport from Western Europe to the world's superpowers, with Eastern Europe (particularly Poland) more generally also rising. With the Soviet boycott, the host Americans were favored. Davis Phinney was considered "the best sprinter on the US team" but "not a great climber"; the hilly course did not favor him. Alexi Grewal nearly missed being able to compete, testing positive for the stimulant phenylethylamine and being suspended 10 days before the Games; he successfully appealed and was reinstated, on the ground that the test was not able to distinguish between phenylethylamine and albuterol (which Grewal took for asthma).[2]

Bermuda, Belize, the Cayman Islands, Cyprus, Puerto Rico, Saudi Arabia, and Uganda each made their debut in the men's individual road race. Great Britain made its 12th 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 190.2 kilometre course over 12 laps of a circuit in Mission Viejo. The course was hilly.[2][3]

Schedule

All times are Pacific Daylight Time (UTC-7)

Date Time Round
Sunday, 29 July 198413:00Final

Results

Grewal and Bauer separated from the lead pack on lap 11. They "never had a large lead" over the next pair, Lauritzen and Sæther, but were always clear of them. Grewal beat Bauer in the final sprint by "less than a wheel."[2]

RankCyclistNationTime
Alexi Grewal United States 4:59:57
Steve Bauer Canada s.t.
Dag Otto Lauritzen Norway + 0' 21"
4 Morten Sæther Norway s.t.
5 Davis Phinney United States + 1' 19"
6 Thurlow Rogers United States s.t.
7 Bojan Ropret Yugoslavia s.t.
8 Néstor Mora Colombia s.t.
9 Ron Kiefel United States 1' 43"
10 Richard Trinkler Switzerland s.t.
11 Raúl Alcalá Mexico s.t.
12 Stefan Maurer Switzerland + 3' 37"
13 Alberto Volpi Italy + 4' 10"
14 Per Christiansson Sweden s.t.
15 Helmut Wechselberger Austria s.t.
16 Enrique Campos Venezuela s.t.
17 Luis Rosendo Ramos Mexico + 6' 14"
18 Brian Fowler New Zealand + 6' 48"
19 Martin Earley Ireland s.t.
20 Atle Kvålsvoll Norway s.t.
21 Fabio Parra Colombia s.t.
22 Thomas Freienstein West Germany + 7' 51"
23 Francisco Antequera Spain + 11' 30"
24 Per Pedersen Denmark + 11' 46"
25 Kari Myyryläinen Finland s.t.
26 Lars Wahlqvist Sweden s.t.
27 Paul Kimmage Ireland s.t.
28 Daniel Amardeilh France s.t.
29 Philippe Bouvatier France s.t.
30 Kjell Nilsson Sweden s.t.
31 Harry Hannus Finland s.t.
32 Stefan Brykt Sweden s.t.
33 Louis Garneau Canada + 15' 30"
34 Kurt Zellhofer Austria s.t.
35 Primož Čerin Yugoslavia s.t.
36 Achim Stadler West Germany s.t.
37 Stephen Cox New Zealand s.t.
38 Patrick Wackström Finland s.t.
39 Gary Thomson Ireland s.t.
40 Kim Eriksen Denmark s.t.
41 Werner Stauff West Germany + 18' 04"
42 Jure Pavlič Yugoslavia s.t.
43 Séamus Downey Ireland s.t.
44 Jean-Paul van Poppel Netherlands + 22' 20"
45 Matsuyoshi Takahashi Japan s.t.
46 Marko Cuderman Yugoslavia s.t.
47 Salvador Rios Mexico s.t.
48 Park Se-ryong South Korea s.t.
49 Johann Traxler Austria s.t.
50 Jeff Leslie Australia s.t.
51 Fernando Correa Venezuela s.t.
52 Carlos Jaramillo Colombia s.t.
53 Arthur Tenn Jamaica s.t.
54 Mustapha Najjari Morocco + 22' 30"
55 Michael Lynch Australia + 27' 05"
Luis Biera ArgentinaDNF
Gary Trowell AustraliaDNF
John Watters AustraliaDNF
Paul Popp AustriaDNF
Carlo Bomans BelgiumDNF
Ronny Van Sweevelt BelgiumDNF
Frank Verleyen BelgiumDNF
Joslyn Chavarria BelizeDNF
Warren Coye BelizeDNF
Lindford Gillitt BelizeDNF
Wernell Reneau BelizeDNF
John Ford BermudaDNF
Earl Godfrey BermudaDNF
Clyde Wilson BermudaDNF
Alain Ayissi CameroonDNF
Joseph Kono CameroonDNF
Dieudonné Ntep CameroonDNF
Thomas Siani CameroonDNF
Pierre Harvey CanadaDNF
Alain Masson CanadaDNF
Craig Merren Cayman IslandsDNF
David Dibben Cayman IslandsDNF
Alfred Ebanks Cayman IslandsDNF
Aldyn Wint Cayman IslandsDNF
Manuel Aravena ChileDNF
Roberto Muñoz ChileDNF
Rogelio Arango ColombiaDNF
Spyros Agrotis CyprusDNF
Ole Byriel DenmarkDNF
Søren Lilholt DenmarkDNF
Harri Hedgren FinlandDNF
Claude Carlin FranceDNF
Denis Pelizzari FranceDNF
Andreas Kappes West GermanyDNF
Mark Bell Great BritainDNF
Neil Martin Great BritainDNF
Peter Sanders Great BritainDNF
Darryl Webster Great BritainDNF
Kanellos Kanellopoulos GreeceDNF
Ilias Kelesidis GreeceDNF
Randolph Toussaint GuyanaDNF
Choy Yiu Chung Hong KongDNF
Hung Chung Yam Hong KongDNF
Law Siu On Hong KongDNF
Leung Hung Tak Hong KongDNF
Stefano Colagè ItalyDNF
Roberto Pagnin ItalyDNF
Renato Piccolo ItalyDNF
Lorenzo Murdock JamaicaDNF
Kim Cheol-seok South KoreaDNF
Lee Jin-ok South KoreaDNF
Sin Dae-cheol South KoreaDNF
Sirop Arslanian LebanonDNF
Dyton Chimwaza MalawiDNF
Daniel Kaswanga MalawiDNF
George Nayeja MalawiDNF
Amadu Yusufu MalawiDNF
Jesús Rios MexicoDNF
Mustapha Afandi MoroccoDNF
Brahim Ben Bouilla MoroccoDNF
Ahmed Rhail MoroccoDNF
Hans Daams NetherlandsDNF
Twan Poels NetherlandsDNF
Nico Verhoeven NetherlandsDNF
Roger Sumich New ZealandDNF
Hans Petter Ødegård NorwayDNF
Ramón Zavaleta PeruDNF
Ramón Rivera Puerto RicoDNF
Maurizio Casadei San MarinoDNF
Hassan Al-Absi Saudi ArabiaDNF
Mohammed Al-Shanqiti Saudi ArabiaDNF
Abdullah Al-Shaye Saudi ArabiaDNF
Ali Al-Ghazawi Saudi ArabiaDNF
Manuel Jorge Domínguez SpainDNF
Miguel Indurain SpainDNF
José Salvador Sanchis SpainDNF
Heinz Imboden SwitzerlandDNF
Benno Wiss SwitzerlandDNF
Muharud Mukasa UgandaDNF
Ernest Buule UgandaDNF

References

  1. "Cycling at the 1980Los Angeles Summer Games: Men's Road Race, Individual". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on April 18, 2020. Retrieved May 17, 2015.
  2. "Road Race, Individual, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved November 6, 2020.
  3. Official Report, vol. 2, p. 379.
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