Cycling at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's individual road race

The men's individual road race at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia, was held on July 31, 1996. There were 183 participants from 57 nations in the race over 221.85 km, with 116 cyclists finishing.[1] For the first time, the event was open to professionals.[2] The maximum number of cyclists per nation was five, up from three in previous editions of the event. The event was won by Pascal Richard of Switzerland, the nation's first victory in the men's individual road race and first medal in the event since a bronze in 1936. Rolf Sørensen earned Denmark's third medal in the event, silver just as in 1964 and 1968. Max Sciandri similarly matched Great Britain's best result: a bronze, as in 1896 and 1956.

Men's road race
at the Games of the XXVI Olympiad
Pascal Richard (1998)
VenueAtlanta
DateJuly 31
Competitors183 from 57 nations
Winning time4:53:56
Medalists
Pascal Richard
 Switzerland
Rolf Sørensen
 Denmark
Max Sciandri
 Great Britain

Background

This was the 15th 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; with the re-introduction of the time trial in Atlanta, this was the first time that both events were held at the same Games. The 1996 Games were also the first to allow top professional riders to compete; this also resulted in lengthening the distance of the course and increasing the number of riders per nation (to increase teamwork opportunity). There was no clear favorite in the race. Miguel Induráin of Spain was the most prominent cyclist competing, but his skills were far more suited to the time trial—in which he would take gold three days later.[2]

Albania, Armenia, Belarus, the Czech Republic, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Oman, Russia, Slovakia, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan each made their debut in the men's individual road race. Great Britain made its 15th 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 221.85 kilometre course over the Buckhead Cycling Course in Atlanta. The distance had been increased from previous Olympic road races to be more consistent with professional races.[2][3]

Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4)

Date Time Round
Wednesday, 31 July 19968:30Final

Results

A three-man breakout occurred with 33 kilometres to go, with Richard, Sørensen, and Sciandri getting clear o the peloton. The final sprint went to Richard. A second group of three formed as well, this time with the home-nation cyclist Andreu winning the sprint for fourth place.[2]

RankCyclistNationTime
Pascal Richard Switzerland 4:53:56
Rolf Sørensen Denmark s.t.
Max Sciandri Great Britain + 2"
4 Frankie Andreu United States + 1' 14"
5 Richard Virenque France s.t.
6 Melcior Mauri Spain + 1' 15"
7 Fabio Baldato Italy + 1' 28"
8 Michele Bartoli Italy s.t.
9 Zbigniew Spruch Poland s.t.
10 Johan Museeuw Belgium s.t.
11 Jesper Skibby Denmark s.t.
12 Lance Armstrong United States s.t.
13 Dmitry Konyshev Russia + 2' 29"
14 Serhiy Ushakov Ukraine s.t.
15 Wilfried Peeters Belgium + 2' 32"
16 Olaf Ludwig Germany + 2' 36"
17 Laurent Brochard France + 2' 37"
18 Arvis Piziks Latvia s.t.
19 Neil Stephens Australia + 2' 38"
20 Erik Zabel Germany + 2' 47"
21 Laurent Jalabert France s.t.
22 Kaspars Ozers Latvia s.t.
23 Robbie McEwen Australia + 2' 48"
24 Jaan Kirsipuu Estonia s.t.
25 Frank Vandenbroucke Belgium s.t.
26 Miguel Induráin Spain s.t.
27 Vassili Davidenko Russia s.t.
28 Rolf Aldag Germany s.t.
29 Andrey Kivilev Kazakhstan s.t.
30 Ján Svorada Czech Republic s.t.
31 Juris Silovs Latvia s.t.
32 Francesco Casagrande Italy s.t.
33 Andrei Tchmil Ukraine s.t.
34 Michel Lafis Sweden s.t.
35 Glenn Magnusson Sweden + 2' 49"
36 Lauri Aus Estonia s.t.
37 Maurizio Fondriest Italy s.t.
38 Erik Dekker Netherlands s.t.
39 Orlando Rodrigues Portugal s.t.
40 Brian Holm Denmark s.t.
41 Steve Bauer Canada s.t.
42 Lars Michaelsen Denmark s.t.
43 Oleh Pankov Ukraine s.t.
44 Werner Riebenbauer Austria s.t.
45 Erik Breukink Netherlands s.t.
46 Harald Morscher Austria s.t.
47 Ruber Marín Colombia s.t.
48 Pedro Lópes Portugal s.t.
49 Andres Lauk Estonia + 2' 50"
50 Slawomir Chrzanowski Poland s.t.
51 Pavel Tonkov Russia s.t.
52 Beat Zberg Switzerland s.t.
53 Alexander Vinokourov Kazakhstan s.t.
54 Peter Wrolich Austria s.t.
55 Markus Andersson Sweden s.t.
56 Aart Vierhouten Netherlands s.t.
57 Joona Laukka Finland s.t.
58 Pyotr Ugryumov Russia s.t.
59 Milan Dvorščík Slovakia s.t.
60 Johan Bruyneel Belgium + 2' 51"
61 Douglas Ryder South Africa s.t.
62 Georg Totschnig Austria s.t.
63 Kari Myyryläinen Finland s.t.
64 Michael Barry Canada s.t.
65 Damian McDonald Australia s.t.
66 Ric Reid New Zealand s.t.
67 Abraham Olano Spain + 2' 52"
68 Ján Valach Slovakia s.t.
69 Pavel Kavetsky Belarus s.t.
70 Robert Pintaric Slovenia s.t.
71 Eduardo Graciano Mexico + 2' 53"
72 David McCann Ireland s.t.
73 Veaceslav Oriol Moldova s.t.
74 Gregory Randolph United States s.t.
75 Gord Fraser Canada s.t.
76 George Hincapie United States s.t.
77 Manuel Fernández Spain s.t.
78 Nuno Marta Portugal s.t.
79 Malcolm Elliott Great Britain s.t.
80 Eric Wohlberg Canada + 2' 54"
81 Peter Luttenberger Austria s.t.
82 Mario Cipollini Italy s.t.
83 Didier Rous France s.t.
84 Javier de Jesús Zapata Colombia s.t.
85 Aleksandr Shefer Kazakhstan s.t.
86 Óscar Giraldo Colombia s.t.
87 Bjarne Riis Denmark + 2' 55"
88 Jacques Landry Canada s.t.
89 Andrey Teteryuk Kazakhstan s.t.
90 Eduardo Uribe Mexico s.t.
91 Mauro Ribeiro Brazil s.t.
92 Dainis Ozols Latvia s.t.
93 Steve Hegg United States s.t.
94 Tomasz Brożyna Poland + 2' 56"
95 Remigijus Lupeikis Lithuania s.t.
96 Raido Kodanipork Estonia s.t.
97 Blayne Wikner South Africa s.t.
98 Stephen Hodge Australia + 2' 57"
99 John Tanner Great Britain s.t.
100 Djamolidine Abdoujaparov Uzbekistan s.t.
101 Marino Alonso Spain s.t.
102 Patrick Jonker Australia s.t.
103 Yevgeny Berzin Russia s.t.
104 Alex Zülle Switzerland + 2' 58"
105 Rolf Järmann Switzerland s.t.
106 Romāns Vainšteins Latvia s.t.
107 Frédéric Moncassin France + 2' 59"
108 Tristan Hoffman Netherlands s.t.
109 Tom Steels Belgium + 3' 00"
110 Thomas Frischknecht Switzerland + 4' 08"
111 Danny Nelissen Netherlands + 4' 12"
112 Candido Barbosa Portugal + 7' 33"
113 Yevgeny Golovanov Belarus + 11' 42"
114 Pavel Zaduban Slovakia s.t.
115 Hussein Monsalve Venezuela s.t.
116 Irving Aguilar Mexico + 11' 43"
Besnik Musaj AlbaniaDNF
Gustavo Artacho ArgentinaDNF
Rubén Pegorín ArgentinaDNF
Arsen Ghazaryan ArmeniaDNF
Lucien Dirksz ArubaDNF
Aleksandr Sharapov BelarusDNF
Oleg Bondarik BelarusDNF
Vyacheslav German BelarusDNF
Elliot Hubbard BermudaDNF
Hernandes Quadri BrazilDNF
Márcio May BrazilDNF
Daniel Rogelim BrazilDNF
Jamil Suaiden BrazilDNF
Stefan Baraud Cayman IslandsDNF
Víctor Garrido ChileDNF
Dubán Ramírez ColombiaDNF
Raúl Montaña ColombiaDNF
Héctor Chiles EcuadorDNF
Paulo Caicedo EcuadorDNF
Pedro Rodríguez EcuadorDNF
Lauri Resik EstoniaDNF
Brian Smith Great BritainDNF
Michael Rich GermanyDNF
Uwe Peschel GermanyDNF
Anton Villatoro GuatemalaDNF
Edwin Santos GuatemalaDNF
Felipe López GuatemalaDNF
Marlon Paniagua GuatemalaDNF
Omar Ochoa GuatemalaDNF
Wong Kam Po Hong KongDNF
László Bodrogi HungaryDNF
Kazuyuki Manabe JapanDNF
Osamu Sumida JapanDNF
Park Min-su South KoreaDNF
Yousef Shadi LibyaDNF
Raimondas Rumsas LithuaniaDNF
Ivanas Romanovas LithuaniaDNF
Linas Balciunas LithuaniaDNF
Raimondas Vilčinskas LithuaniaDNF
Adan Juárez MexicoDNF
Domingo González MexicoDNF
Igor Pugaci MoldovaDNF
Ruslan Ivanov MoldovaDNF
Igor Bonciucov MoldovaDNF
Oleg Tonoritchi MoldovaDNF
Dashnyamyn Tömör-Ochir MongoliaDNF
Glen Mitchell New ZealandDNF
Scott Guyton New ZealandDNF
Brian Fowler New ZealandDNF
Svein-Gaute Hølestøl NorwayDNF
Youssef Khanfar Al-Shakali OmanDNF
Dariusz Baranowski PolandDNF
José Azevedo PortugalDNF[4]
Róbert Nagy SlovakiaDNF
Miroslav Lipták SlovakiaDNF
Michael Andersson SwedenDNF
Chen Chih-hao Chinese TaipeiDNF
Mykhailo Khalilov UkraineDNF
Volodymyr Pulnikov UkraineDNF
Ali Sayed Darwish United Arab EmiratesDNF
Gregorio Bare UruguayDNF
Ricardo Guedes UruguayDNF
Manuel Guevara VenezuelaDNF
Carlos Maya VenezuelaDNF
José Balaustre VenezuelaDNF
Rubén Abreu VenezuelaDNF
Timothy Jones ZimbabweDNF

References

  1. "Cycling at the 1996 Atlanta Summer Games: Men's Road Race, Individual". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on April 18, 2020. Retrieved March 3, 2020.
  2. "Road Race, Individual, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved November 9, 2020.
  3. Official Report, vol. 5, p. 160.
  4. Olympedia shows Azevedo as finishing in 114th place at 11' 43" behind the leader, but both the Official Report and IOC webpage indicate he did not finish.

Sources

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