Cycling at the 2004 Summer Olympics – Men's points race

Last updated

Contents

Men's points race
at the Games of the XXVIII Olympiad
Mikhail Ignatyev IMG 1233 (cropped).JPG
Mikhail Ignatiev (2011)
Venue Athens Olympic Velodrome
Date24 August
Competitors23 from 23 nations
Winning score93
Medalists
Gold medal icon.svg Mikhail Ignatiev
Flag of Russia.svg  Russia
Silver medal icon.svg Joan Llaneras
Flag of Spain.svg  Spain
Bronze medal icon.svg Guido Fulst
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany
  2000
2008  

The men's points race in cycling at the 2004 Summer Olympics consisted of a 160 lap (40 kilometre) points race with 16 sprints where points were awarded. The event was held on 24 August 2004 at the Athens Olympic Velodrome. There were 23 competitors from 23 nations, with each nation limited to one cyclist in the event. The event was won by Mikhail Ignatiev of Russia, the nation's first victory in the men's points race. Spain's Joan Llaneras, the defending champion, took silver; he was the first and only person (of any gender) to win multiple medals in the relatively short-lived points race, and ended with three medals after another gold in 2008. Guido Fulst of Germany took bronze, the first medal in the event for that nation since 1900. [1]

Background

This was the seventh appearance of the event. It was first held in 1900 and not again until 1984; after that, it was held every Summer Games until 2008 when it was removed from the programme. The women's version was held from 1996 through 2008. [1]

8 of the 23 cyclists from the 2000 Games returned: gold medalist Joan Llaneras of Spain, silver medalist Milton Wynants of Uruguay, sixth-place finisher Franz Stocher of Austria, eleventh-place finisher Wong Kam Po of Hong Kong, fourteenth-place finisher Juan Curuchet of Argentina, fifteenth-place finisher Matthew Gilmore of Belgium, sixteenth-place finisher Makoto Iijima of Japan, and seventeenth-place finisher Vasyl Yakovlev of Ukraine. Llaneras, Wynants, Stocher, Curuchet, and Yakovlev had all competed in 1996 as well; Yakovlev was on his fourth Games.

Llaneras won the World Championships in 1996, 1998, and 2000. Chris Newton of Great Britain was the 2002 World Champion. Stocher won in 2003, with Llaneras in second. Franck Perque of France was the reigning (2004) champion.

Belarus and the Czech Republic each made their debut in the event. France and Italy both competed for the seventh time, the only nations to have competed in all seven Olympic men's points races.

Competition format

The format changed slightly from previous incarnations of the Olympic points race. The event was still a single race at 40 kilometres distance, with points for 16 sprints (every 2.5 kilometres). The scoring of laps changed, however. Rather than riders a lap behind the leaders being automatically placed behind them, and unable to score sprint points, now cyclists earned a 20-point bonus for each lap ahead. This bonus was large enough that it had largely the same result in practice.

5 points were given to the first finisher of each sprint, with 3 going to the second-place finisher, 2 going to the third place cyclist, and 1 going to the fourth place rider. Cyclists could also score points by lapping the main body of riders, known as the peloton. 20 points were gained by doing this, while 20 points were lost if the peloton lapped the cyclist. [2]

Schedule

All times are Greece Standard Time (UTC+2)

DateTimeRound
Tuesday, 24 August 200417:30Final

Results

Ignatiev got a lap ahead of everyone else, giving him a 20-point advantage over the four-man chase group. Llaneras finished strong, winning 3 of the last 4 laps for 15 points. This gave him a total of 22 sprint points, most in the field and 9 more than Ignatiev, but the lap difference kept the Spaniard in second place. [1] [2]

RankCyclistNationSprint
points
Extra laps
(20 pts each)
Total
points
Gold medal icon.svg Mikhail Ignatiev Flag of Russia.svg  Russia 13493
Silver medal icon.svg Joan Llaneras Flag of Spain.svg  Spain 22382
Bronze medal icon.svg Guido Fulst Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 19379
4 Greg Henderson Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand 18368
5 Milan Kadlec Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic 15365
6 Mark Renshaw Flag of Australia.svg  Australia 20260
7 Peter Schep Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Netherlands 18258
8 Angelo Ciccone Flag of Italy (2003-2006).svg  Italy 9249
9 Milton Wynants Flag of Uruguay.svg  Uruguay 6246
10 Franck Perque Flag of France.svg  France 3243
11 Marco Arriagada Flag of Chile.svg  Chile 5125
12 Yauheni Sobal Flag of Belarus (1995-2012).svg  Belarus 4124
13 Juan Curuchet Flag of Argentina (1861-2010).svg  Argentina 3123
14 Colby Pearce Flag of the United States.svg  United States 3123
15 Alexey Kolessov Flag of Kazakhstan (3-2).svg  Kazakhstan 2122
16 Makoto Iijima Flag of Japan.svg  Japan 13013
17 Franz Stocher Flag of Austria.svg  Austria 909
18 Matthew Gilmore Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Belgium 707
19 Vasyl Yakovlev Flag of Ukraine.svg  Ukraine 303
20 Wong Kam Po Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong 202
Chris Newton Flag of the United Kingdom (3-2).svg  Great Britain DNF
Mahdi Sohrabi Flag of Iran.svg  Iran DNF
Tomas Vaitkus Flag of Lithuania.svg  Lithuania DNF

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Points Race, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 10 February 2021.
  2. 1 2 "Cycling at the 2004 Athens Summer Games: Men's Points Race". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 10 March 2020.