Cycling at the 2008 Summer Olympics – Men's sprint

The men's sprint at the 2008 Summer Olympics took place on August 17–19 at the Laoshan Velodrome. There were 21 competitors from 15 nations, with each nation limited to two cyclists.[1] The event was won by Chris Hoy of Great Britain, the nation's first victory in the men's sprint and first medal in the event since 1948. He faced his teammate Jason Kenny in the final, the first time since 1984 that one nation had taken the top two spots. Mickaël Bourgain of France earned bronze. Germany's four-Games (five if East Germany before unification is included) podium streak ended.

Men's sprint
at the Games of the XXIX Olympiad
Laoshan Velodrome
VenueLaoshan Velodrome
DatesAugust 17 (preliminaries—2nd round)
August 18 (quarterfinals)
August 19 (semifinals and finals)
Competitors21 from 15 nations
Winning time10.228/10.216
Medalists
Chris Hoy  Great Britain
Jason Kenny  Great Britain
Mickaël Bourgain  France

Background

This was the 24th appearance of the event, which has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1904 and 1912. Three of the quarterfinalists from 2004 returned: gold medalist Ryan Bayley of Australia, silver medalist Theo Bos of the Netherlands, and eighth-place finisher Mickaël Bourgain of France. Bos (the 2004, 2006, and 2007 world champion) and Chris Hoy of Great Britain (the 2008 world champion and gold medalist in keirin and team sprint earlier in the 2008 Games) were the favorites.[1]

The People's Republic of China, Estonia, and Russia each made their debut in the men's sprint. France made its 24th appearance, the only nation to have competed at every appearance of the event.

Qualification

Each National Olympic Committee (NOC) could qualify up to 2 cyclists; there were a total of 21 quota places. Each of the 13 nations qualified for the team sprint could enter one cyclist in the individual sprint. Individuals could also earn qualification through the World Championship, the World Cup, and the "B" World Championship. The top five cyclists on the UCI ranking also qualified.

Competition format

This track cycling event consisted of numerous rounds. The competition began with a flying time trial over 200 metres (the cyclists went around the track 3.5 times, or 875 metres, but only the last 200 metres were timed). All races after the qualifying round consisted of 3 laps of the track (750 metres) but with time recorded only for the final 200 metres. The top 18 cyclists in that qualifying round were seeded into the 1/16 finals. There, they raced one-on-one. The nine winners advanced to the 1/8 finals, while the nine losers were sent to the first repechage. In the repechage, the cyclists were placed in heats of three cyclists apiece; winners moved back into the main competition by advancing into the 1/8 finals.

The twelve cyclists in the 1/8 finals again competed one-on-one. The six winners advanced to the quarterfinals, with the six losers getting another chance at the second repechage. This repechage also consisted of three-cyclist heats, with the two winners moving on to the quarterfinals and the rest of the cyclists competing in a 9th to 12th place classification race.

Beginning with the quarterfinals, the head-to-head competitions switched to a best-of-three format. That format was also used for the semifinals and final. In addition, the bronze medal competition was a best-of-three match between the semifinal losers. The classification race for 5th to 8th places was a single race with all four cyclists competing.[2]

Records

The records for the sprint are 200 metre flying time trial records, kept for the qualifying round in later Games as well as for the finish of races.

World record Theo Bos (NED)9.772Moscow, Russia16 December 2006
Olympic record Gary Neiwand (AUS)10.129Atlanta, United States24 July 1996

Chris Hoy set a new Olympic record of 9.815 seconds in the qualifying round. The next four fastest men also came in under the old record.

Schedule

All times are China Standard Time (UTC+8)

Date Time Round
Sunday, 17 August 200811:20
16:30
17:15
17:45
18:20
Qualifying round
Round 1
First repechage
1/8 finals
Second repechage
Monday, 18 August 200817:20Quarterfinals
Tuesday, 19 August 200816:40
16:50
18:35
 
18:50
Semifinals
Classification 9–12
Final
Bronze medal match
Classification 5–8

Results

Qualifying round

200 metre time trial, with the top 18 riders advancing.[3]

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Chris Hoy Great Britain 9.815 73.357 Q, OR
2 Jason Kenny Great Britain 9.857 73.044 Q
3 Stefan Nimke Germany 10.064 71.542 Q
4 Kévin Sireau France 10.098 71.301 Q
5 Mickaël Bourgain France 10.123 71.125 Q
6 Maximilian Levy Germany 10.199 70.595 Q
7 Azizulhasni Awang Malaysia 10.272 70.093 Q
8 Roberto Chiappa Italy 10.314 69.808 Q
9 Theo Bos Netherlands 10.318 69.780 Q
10 Mark French Australia 10.337 69.652 Q
11 Kazunari Watanabe Japan 10.346 69.592 Q
12 Ryan Bayley Australia 10.362 69.484 Q
13 Teun Mulder Netherlands 10.373 69.410 Q
14 Tsubasa Kitatsuru Japan 10.391 69.290 Q
15 Michael Blatchford United States 10.470 68.767 Q
16 Zhang Lei China 10.497 68.591 Q
17 Łukasz Kwiatkowski Poland 10.504 68.545 Q
18 Denis Dmitriev Russia 10.565 68.149 Q
19 Adam Ptáčník Czech Republic 10.569 68.123
20 Vasileios Reppas Greece 10.966 65.657
21 Daniel Novikov Estonia 11.187 64.360

Round 1

The eighteen qualifying cyclists from the preliminary round were paired, 1 vs. 18, 2 vs. 17, and so on, in head-to-head matches, with the winners advancing to the second round and the losers to the first round repechage.[4]

Heat 1

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Chris Hoy Great Britain10.60767.879Q
2Denis Dmitriev RussiaR

Heat 2

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Jason Kenny Great Britain10.67267.466Q
2Łukasz Kwiatkowski PolandR

Heat 3

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Stefan Nimke Germany10.82866.494Q
2Zhang Lei ChinaR

Heat 4

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Kévin Sireau France10.74267.026Q
2Michael Blatchford United StatesR

Heat 5

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Mickaël Bourgain France10.56268.168Q
2Tsubasa Kitatsuru JapanR

Heat 6

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Maximilian Levy Germany10.84066.420Q
2Teun Mulder NetherlandsR

Heat 7

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Ryan Bayley Australia10.76266.902Q
2Azizulhasni Awang MalaysiaR

Heat 8

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Roberto Chiappa Italy10.78666.753Q
2Kazunari Watanabe JapanR

Heat 9

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Theo Bos Netherlands10.95965.699Q
2Mark French AustraliaR

First repechage

The nine losers from the first round were put into three three-man matches, with the winner of each advancing to the next round.[5]

First repechage heat 1

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Teun Mulder Netherlands10.88966.121Q
2Mark French Australia
3Denis Dmitriev Russia

First repechage heat 2

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Azizulhasni Awang Malaysia10.95965.699Q
2Tsubasa Kitatsuru Japan
3Łukasz Kwiatkowski Poland

First repechage heat 3

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Kazunari Watanabe Japan10.96565.663Q
2Michael Blatchford United States
3Zhang Lei China

1/8 finals

The twelve cyclists who qualified this far were paired off again in head-to-head sprint matches.[6]

1/8 final 1

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Chris Hoy Great Britain10.63667.694Q
2Kazunari Watanabe JapanR

1/8 final 2

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Jason Kenny Great Britain10.53168.369Q
2Azizulhasni Awang MalaysiaR

1/8 final 3

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Teun Mulder Netherlands10.88866.127Q
2Stefan Nimke GermanyR

1/8 final 4

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Theo Bos Netherlands10.77766.808Q
2Kévin Sireau FranceR

1/8 final 5

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Mickaël Bourgain France10.73467.706Q
2Roberto Chiappa ItalyR

1/8 final 6

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Maximilian Levy Germany10.76366.895Q
2Ryan Bayley AustraliaR

Second repechage

The six cyclists who lost in the second round were matched into two three-man races, with the winner of each advancing to the next round.[7]

Second repechage heat 1

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Kévin Sireau France10.57068.117Q
2Kazunari Watanabe JapanC
3Ryan Bayley AustraliaC

Second repechage heat 2

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Azizulhasni Awang Malaysia11.01065.395Q
2Stefan Nimke GermanyC
3Roberto Chiappa ItalyC

Quarterfinals

The eight cyclists qualified this far were paired for a best two-out-of-three series of 200 metre races. None of the pairings required a third race.[8]

Quarterfinal 1

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3Notes
1Chris Hoy Great Britain10.82010.302N/AQ
2Azizulhasni Awang MalaysiaN/AC

Quarterfinal 2

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3Notes
1Jason Kenny Great Britain10.54610.595N/AQ
2Kévin Sireau FranceN/AC

Quarterfinal 3

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3Notes
1Maximilian Levy Germany10.68910.660N/AQ
2Teun Mulder NetherlandsN/AC

Quarterfinal 4

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3Notes
1Mickaël Bourgain France10.52410.463N/AQ
2Theo Bos NetherlandsN/AC

Semifinals

The four cyclists qualified this far were paired again for a best two-out-of-three series of races.[9]

Semifinal 1

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3Notes
1Chris Hoy Great Britain10.26010.358N/AQ
2Mickaël Bourgain FranceN/AB

Semifinal 2

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3Notes
1Jason Kenny Great Britain10.59410.335N/AQ
2Maximilian Levy GermanyN/AB

Finals

The winners from the semifinals were paired to race for gold and silver, and the losers from that round raced for bronze. Each match was again the best two-out-of-three races.[10]

9th—12th place classification race

During the same session as the semifinals, the four cyclists who were eliminated in the second round repechage were put into a single four-man race to determine exact placings from ninth to twelfth.[11]

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
9Stefan Nimke Germany11.05165.152
10Roberto Chiappa Italy
11Ryan Bayley Australia
12Kazunari Watanabe Japan

5th—8th place classification race

In the same session as the finals, the four cyclists who lost in the quarterfinals were put into one four-man 200 metre race to determine exact placings from fifth to eighth.[12]

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
5Kévin Sireau France10.71967.170
6Teun Mulder Netherlands
7Theo Bos Netherlands
8Azizulhasni Awang Malaysia

Bronze medal match

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3
Mickaël Bourgain France11.04710.560
4Maximilian Levy Germany10.666

Gold medal match

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3
Chris Hoy Great Britain10.22810.216N/A
Jason Kenny Great BritainN/A

Final classification

RankCyclistNation
Chris Hoy Great Britain
Jason Kenny Great Britain
Mickaël Bourgain France
4Maximilian Levy Germany
5Kévin Sireau France
6Teun Mulder Netherlands
7Theo Bos Netherlands
8Azizulhasni Awang Malaysia
9Stefan Nimke Germany
10Roberto Chiappa Italy
11Ryan Bayley Australia
12Kazunari Watanabe Japan
13Mark French Australia
14Tsubasa Kitatsuru Japan
15Michael Blatchford United States
16Zhang Lei China
17Łukasz Kwiatkowski Poland
18Denis Dmitriev Russia
19 Adam Ptáčník Czech Republic
20 Vasileios Reppas Greece
21 Daniel Novikov Estonia

References

  1. "Sprint, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-08-15. Retrieved 2008-08-15.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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  7. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-08-20. Retrieved 2008-08-18.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-08-22. Retrieved 2008-08-18.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-08-29. Retrieved 2008-08-19.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-08-24. Retrieved 2008-08-19.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  11. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-09-07. Retrieved 2008-08-19.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-09-01. Retrieved 2008-08-19.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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