2008 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships – Men's elite race

Last updated
Men's Elite Cyclo-cross Race
2008 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships
Jersey rainbow.svg
Race details
DatesJanuary 27, 2008 (2008-01-27)
Stages1
Winning time1h 05' 27"
Medalists
 Gold medal icon.svg GoldFlag of the Netherlands.svg  Lars Boom  (NED)
 Silver medal icon.svg SilverFlag of the Czech Republic.svg  Zdeněk Štybar  (CZE)
 Bronze medal icon.svg BronzeFlag of Belgium (civil).svg  Sven Nys  (BEL)
  2007
2009  

This event was held on Sunday January 27, 2008 as part of the 2008 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships in Treviso, Italy.

Contents

Race summary

Due to the speedy track, no riders managed to break away from the pack and about 20 riders were still in contention for the title going into the final lap. One of the favourites, Lars Boom, managed to break away at the beginning of the last lap and stayed away, riding to his first World Championship title in the Men's Elite category. Sven Nys, Zdeněk Štybar and Erwin Vervecken came within 4 seconds of closing the gap again, but never succeeded. At the finish line, Štybar outsprinted Nys to take the silver, Vervecken finished fourth. Boom was the first non-Belgian winner since Richard Groenendaal in 2000.

Other favourites Francis Mourey and Bart Wellens crashed heavily in the sixth lap. Mourey abandoned the race, Wellens finished but was unable to recover fully and get back into the leading group.

Ranking

RankCyclistTime
Gold medal icon.svg Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Lars Boom  (NED)1:05:27.79
Silver medal icon.svg Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Zdeněk Štybar  (CZE)+ 0:05.17
Bronze medal icon.svg Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Sven Nys  (BEL)+ 0:06.15
4Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Erwin Vervecken  (BEL)+ 0:09.03
5Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Radomír Šimůnek  (CZE)+ 0:10.03
6Flag of Italy.svg  Marco Aurelio Fontana  (ITA)+ 0:10.08
7Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Sven Vanthourenhout  (BEL)+ 0:10.76
8Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg  Christian Heule  (SUI)+ 0:12.20
9Flag of France.svg  John Gadret  (FRA)+ 0:12.30
10Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Klaas Vantornout  (BEL)+ 0:12.86
11Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Kevin Pauwels  (BEL)+ 0:18.62
12Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Richard Groenendaal  (NED)+ 0:18.68
13Flag of Italy.svg  Enrico Franzoi  (ITA)+ 0:19.60
14Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Bart Aernouts  (BEL)+ 0:20.43
15Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Bart Wellens  (BEL)+ 0:21.93
16Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg  Simon Zahner  (SUI)+ 0:22.43
17Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Gerben De Knegt  (NED)+ 0:27.29
18Flag of Poland.svg  Marek Cichosz  (POL)+ 0:27.41
19Flag of Slovakia.svg  Milan Barenyi  (SVK)+ 0:28.50
20Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Wilant Van Gils  (NED)+ 0:31.50
21Flag of Italy.svg  Marco Bianco  (ITA)+ 0:37.71
22Flag of Spain.svg  Isaac Suarez Fernandez  (ESP)+ 0:40.87
23Flag of the United States.svg  Jonathan Page  (USA)+ 0:41.29
24Flag of France.svg  Steve Chainel  (FRA)+ 0:49.52
25Flag of Spain.svg  José Antonio Hermida  (ESP)+ 1:00.34
26Flag of the United States.svg  Timothy Johnson  (USA)+ 1:02.75
27Flag of the United States.svg  Jeremy Powers  (USA)+ 1:11.31
28Flag of France.svg  David Derepas  (FRA)+ 1:19.90
29Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg  Pirmin Lang  (SUI)+ 1:26.15
30Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Dieter Vanthourenhout  (BEL)+ 1:37.50
31Flag of Germany.svg  Malte Urban  (GER)+ 1:51.22
32Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Kamil Ausbuher  (CZE)+ 2:07.86
33Flag of Italy.svg  Alessandro Gambino  (ITA)+ 2:24.67
34Flag of Slovakia.svg  Robert Glajza  (SVK)+ 2:24.69
35Flag of Italy.svg  Luca Damiani  (ITA)+ 2:30.48
36Flag of Spain.svg  Javier Ruiz De Larrinaga Ibanez  (ESP)+ 2:34.28
37Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg  Marcel Wildhaber  (SUI)+ 2:41.08
38Flag of Germany.svg  Finn Heitmann  (GER)+ 2:52.66
39Flag of Slovakia.svg  Maroš Kováč  (SVK)+ 3:24.79
40Flag of Sweden.svg  Magnus Darvell  (SWE)+ 3:25.97
41Flag of France.svg  Nicolas Bazin  (FRA)+ 3:36.64
42Flag of Luxembourg.svg  Gusty Bausch  (LUX)+ 3:46.72
43Flag of France.svg  Julien Belgy  (FRA)+ 4:02.88
44Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Thijs Al  (NED)+ 4:09.77
45Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg  Michael Müller  (SUI)+ 4:20.48
46Flag of Poland.svg  Mariusz Gil  (POL)+ 4:21.51
47Flag of Germany.svg  René Birkenfeld  (GER)+ 4:32.35
48Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Mike Garrigan  (CAN)+ 4:33.77
49Flag of Germany.svg  Johannes Sickmueller  (GER)+ 4:36.89
50Flag of Slovakia.svg  Vaclav Metlicka  (SVK)+ 4:45.19
51Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  Robert Jebb  (GBR)+ 4:45.52
52Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  Paul Oldham  (GBR)+ 4:54.20
53Flag of Sweden.svg  Fredrik Ericsson  (SWE)+ 5:10.13
54Flag of Denmark.svg  Joachim Parbo  (DEN)+ 5:20.21
55Flag of Spain.svg  Unai Yus Kerejeta  (ESP)+ 5:57.00
56Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Aaron Schooler  (CAN)+ 6:45.51
57Flag of Japan.svg  Keiichi Tsujiura  (JPN)+ 7:16.35
58Flag of Sweden.svg  Jens Westergren  (SWE)+ 7:39.30
59Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Osmond Bakker  (CAN)+ 7:39.65
60Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Zdeněk Mlynář  (CZE)– 1 LAP
61Flag of Norway.svg  Martin Vestby  (NOR)– 2 LAPS
62Flag of Japan.svg  Masanori Kosaka  (JPN)– 3 LAPS

2 riders, Francis Mourey and Maarten Nijland abandoned the race.

[1]

Fastest Laps

LapCyclistTime
1.Flag of Italy.svg  Marco Aurelio Fontana  (ITA)7:06
2.Flag of Italy.svg  Enrico Franzoi  (ITA)7:09
3.Flag of Italy.svg  Enrico Franzoi  (ITA)7:09
4.Flag of Spain.svg  José Antonio Hermida  (ESP)7:15
5.Flag of Slovakia.svg  Milan Barenyi  (SVK)7:10
6.Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Zdeněk Štybar  (CZE)7:04
7.Flag of the United States.svg  Timothy Johnson  (USA)7:15
8.Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Sven Vanthourenhout  (BEL)7:14
9.Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Lars Boom  (NED)6:51

Notes

  1. "UCI WC 2008 Men's Elite Results". UCI Archives. Archived from the original on 28 November 2012. Retrieved 19 February 2012.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sven Nys</span> Belgian cyclist

Sven Nys is a former professional cyclist competing in cyclo-cross and mountain bike. With two world championships, seven world cups, and over 140 competitive victories, he is considered one of the best cyclo-cross racers of his generation, and remains a prominent figure in cyclo-cross. Apart from cyclo-cross, Nys is also fivefold national mountainbike champion, and has competed in that discipline in two Olympic games.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bart Wellens</span> Belgian cyclist

Bart Wellens is a Belgian former professional cyclo-cross and road cyclist. He now works as the team manager of UCI Cyclo-cross Team 777.

Groupama–FDJ is a French cycling team at UCI WorldTeam level. The team is managed by Marc Madiot, a former road bicycle racer and winner of the Paris–Roubaix classic in 1985 and 1991. The team is predominantly French.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Visma–Lease a Bike (men's team)</span> Dutch cycling team

Visma–Lease a Bike is a Dutch professional bicycle racing team, successor of the former Rabobank. The team consists of four sections: ProTeam, Women's Team, Development Team, and cyclo-cross.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Benelux Tour</span> Cycling stage race in Belgium and the Netherlands

The Benelux Tour is a road bicycle racing stage-race that is part of the UCI World Tour. The race was established in 2005 and was originally known as the Eneco Tour, named after the original sponsor. In 2017, the online discount broker BinckBank took over as the title sponsor, with the name of the race changing accordingly. In 2021, with the absence of a title sponsor, the race was known again as the Benelux Tour. The race was not held in 2022 due to conflicts with the racing calendar. In 2023, waste management company Renewi joined as a sponsor and renamed the race once again, this time to the Renewi Tour.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard Groenendaal</span> Dutch former cyclist

Richard Marinus Anthonius Groenendaal is a Dutch former professional cyclo-cross cyclist. Groenendaal won the UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships in 2000 and the overall titles in the UCI Cyclo-cross World Cup 1997–1998, 2000–2001 and 2003–2004 and in the Cyclo-cross Superprestige in 1997–1998 and 2000–2001.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lars Boom</span> Dutch racing cyclist

Lars Anthonius Johannes Boom is a professional cyclo-cross and mountain bike racing cyclist from the Netherlands. He has also competed professionally in road racing, having raced between 2004 and 2019.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Greg Van Avermaet</span> Belgian cyclist

Greg Van Avermaet is a retired Belgian professional cyclist. Considered one of the most versatile riders of modern cycling, Van Avermaet was a specialist of the classic cycle races, but has also won stages and the general classification in stage races, particularly when run on a hilly terrain, such as the 2016 Tirreno–Adriatico, and the 2018 Tour de Yorkshire. His strong sprint finish enabled him to win sprints of small lead groups, but he has also won races after solo breakaways.

The Druivencross, also known as Vlaamse Druivenveldrit, is a cyclo-cross race held in Overijse, Belgium. The race is organised by the VZW Sportvrienden Overijse and was first held in 1960. The race is regarded as a Cyclo-cross classic and has a difficult and dangerous parcours that often results in crashes.

The 1998 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships were held in Middelfart, Denmark on Saturday 31 January 1998. The course was dry, hard and technical. Weather conditions were sunny, but freezing (-2°C).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Zdeněk Štybar</span> Czech cyclist

Zdeněk Štybar is a Czech former professional cyclist, who rode professionally in cyclo-cross and road bicycle racing between 2005 and 2024 for Telenet–Fidea, the Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl Team and Team Jayco–AlUla.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Baloise–Trek Lions</span> Belgian cycling team

Baloise–Trek Lions is a Belgian professional cycling team based in Belgium which focuses predominantly on the cyclo-cross season. The team is named after its main sponsors, Bâloise and Trek. The team had various different names in the past amongst which Spaar-Select and Telenet-Fidea.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2012 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships – Men's elite race</span> Cycling race

This event was held on Sunday 29 January 2012 as part of the 2012 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships. Ten laps had to be completed, totalling up to 29.44 kilometre.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2007 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships – Men's elite race</span> Cycling race

The 2007 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships – Men's elite race was held on Sunday 28 January 2007 as a part of the 2007 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships in Hooglede-Gits, Belgium.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2013 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships – Men's elite race</span> Cycling race

This event was held on 2 February 2013 as part of the 2013 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships in Louisville, Kentucky, United States. Belgian Sven Nys took home the gold for the second time in his career, a few seconds ahead of Klaas Vantornout, another Belgian. In the background, Lars van der Haar of the Netherlands managed to secure a third spot in his first year with the elite men.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2014 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships – Men's elite race</span> Cycling race

This event was held on 2 February 2014 as part of the 2014 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships in Hoogerheide, Netherlands. Participants must be men born in 1991 or before. It was won by Zdeněk Štybar of Czech Republic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2015 Tour of Flanders</span> Cycling race

The 2015 Tour of Flanders was the 99th edition of the Tour of Flanders one-day cycling race. It took place on 5 April and was the eighth race of the 2015 UCI World Tour. The race was one of the cobbled classics and was the second of the cycling monuments on the 2015 calendar. The 2014 champion was Fabian Cancellara; he was not able to defend his title after breaking two vertebrae in a crash at E3 Harelbeke.

The 2015 Eneco Tour was a road cycling stage race that took place in the Netherlands and Belgium between 10 and 16 August 2015. It was the 11th edition of the Eneco Tour stage race and was the twenty-first race of the 2015 UCI World Tour.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tom Pidcock</span> British cyclist (born 1999)

Thomas Pidcock is a British cyclist who currently competes in the cyclo-cross, mountain bike and road bicycle racing disciplines of the sport for UCI WorldTeam Ineos Grenadiers.