Cycling Track – Women's individual pursuit at the 2018 Commonwealth Games | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Venue | Anna Meares Velodrome | |||||||||
Dates | 6 April | |||||||||
Competitors | 22 from 9 nations | |||||||||
Winning time | 3:26.088 | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
Cycling at the 2018 Commonwealth Games | ||
---|---|---|
Road cycling | ||
Road race | men | women |
Time trial | men | women |
Track cycling | ||
Individual pursuit | men | women |
Team pursuit | men | women |
Sprint | men | women |
Team sprint | men | women |
Points race | men | women |
Keirin | men | women |
Scratch race | men | women |
Time trial | men | women |
Mountain biking | ||
Cross-country | men | women |
Para-track | ||
Sprint | men | women |
Time trial | men | women |
The women's individual pursuit at the 2018 Commonwealth Games was part of the cycling programme, which took place on 6 April 2018.
Prior to this competition, the existing world and Games records were as follows:
World record | Chloé Dygert (USA) | 3:20.060 | Apeldoorn, Netherlands | 3 March 2018 |
Games record | Joanna Rowsell (ENG) | 3:29.038 | Glasgow, Scotland | 25 July 2014 |
The schedule is as follows: [1]
All times are Australian Eastern Standard Time (UTC+10)
Date | Time | Round |
---|---|---|
Friday 6 April 2018 | 13:26 | Qualifying |
19:30 / 19:38 | Finals |
The two fastest riders advance to the gold medal final. The next two fastest riders advance to the bronze medal final. [2]
Rank | Riders | Time | Behind | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Katie Archibald (SCO) | 3:24.119 | — | QG, GR |
2 | Rebecca Wiasak (AUS) | 3:25.936 | +1.817 | QG |
3 | Annette Edmondson (AUS) | 3:27.255 | +3.136 | QB |
4 | Ashlee Ankudinoff (AUS) | 3:27.624 | +3.505 | QB |
5 | Kirstie James (NZL) | 3:29.192 | +5.073 | |
6 | Ellesse Andrews (NZL) | 3:33.707 | +9.588 | |
7 | Annie Foreman-Mackey (CAN) | 3:33.975 | +9.856 | |
8 | Ciara Horne (WAL) | 3:35.153 | +11.034 | |
9 | Bryony Botha (NZL) | 3:35.394 | +11.275 | |
10 | Emily Nelson (ENG) | 3:36.397 | +12.278 | |
11 | Kinley Gibson (CAN) | 3:36.582 | +12.463 | |
12 | Emily Kay (ENG) | 3:37.501 | +13.382 | |
13 | Ellie Dickinson (ENG) | 3:37.616 | +13.497 | |
14 | Jessica Roberts (WAL) | 3:37.625 | +13.506 | |
15 | Hayley Jones (WAL) | 3:37.658 | +13.539 | |
16 | Ariane Bonhomme (CAN) | 3:38.604 | +14.485 | |
17 | Eileen Burns (NIR) | 3:42.486 | +18.367 | |
18 | Charlene du Preez (RSA) | 3:45.764 | +21.645 | |
19 | Ilze Bole (RSA) | 3:53.312 | +29.193 | |
20 | Sonali Mayanglambam (IND) | 3:59.028 | +34.909 | |
21 | Danielle van Niekerk (RSA) | 4:03.570 | +39.451 | |
22 | Amritha Reghunath (IND) | 4:12.437 | +48.318 |
The final classification is determined in the medal finals. [3]
Rank | Riders | Time | Behind | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bronze medal final | ||||
Annette Edmondson (AUS) | 3:30.922 | — | ||
4 | Ashlee Ankudinoff (AUS) | 3:31.093 | +0.171 | |
Gold medal final | ||||
Katie Archibald (SCO) | 3:26.088 | — | ||
Rebecca Wiasak (AUS) | 3:27.548 | +1.460 |
The women's individual pursuit at the 2008 Summer Olympics took place on August 17 at the Laoshan Velodrome.
The Women's Individual C5 Pursuit took place on 30 August 2012 at the London Velopark.
The Women's Individual Pursuit B track cycling event at the 2012 Summer Paralympics took place on September 2 at London Velopark. This class was for blind and visually impaired cyclists riding with a sighted pilot. Eleven pairs from nine different nations competed.
This is an overview of the progression of the Commonwealth Games track cycling records, maintained by the CGF.
The Women's tandem sprint B at the 2018 Commonwealth Games, was part of the cycling programme, which took place on 5 April 2018. This event was for blind and visually impaired cyclists riding with a sighted pilot.
The women's team pursuit at the 2018 Commonwealth Games was part of the cycling programme, which took place on 5 April 2018.
The men's team pursuit at the 2018 Commonwealth Games was part of the cycling programme, which took place on 5 April 2018. The New Zealand team originally had the third fastest time in the qualifying round, but were disqualified after one of their bikes failed a technical inspection.
The women's team sprint at the 2018 Commonwealth Games was part of the cycling programme, which took place on 5 April 2018.
The men's team sprint at the 2018 Commonwealth Games was part of the cycling programme, which took place on 5 April 2018.
The women's sprint at the 2018 Commonwealth Games was part of the cycling programme, which took place on 6 April 2018.
The men's individual pursuit at the 2018 Commonwealth Games was part of the cycling programme, which took place on 6 April 2018.
The men's sprint at the 2018 Commonwealth Games was part of the cycling programme, taking place on 7 April 2018.
The women's individual pursuit class C1–3 track cycling event at the 2020 Summer Paralympics took place on 25 August 2021 at the Izu Velodrome, Japan. This class (C) is for the cyclist who has impairments that affect their legs, arms, and/or trunk but are still capable to use a standard bicycle. There will be 15 cyclists from 11 nations competing.
The women's individual pursuit class C4 track cycling event at the 2020 Summer Paralympics was contested on 25 August 2021 at the Izu Velodrome, Japan. This class is for the cyclist who has impairments that affect their legs, arms, and/or trunk; they are still able to use a standard bicycle. 6 cyclist from 5 nations will be competing in this event.
The women's individual pursuit class C5 track cycling event at the 2020 Summer Paralympics will be taking place on 25 August 2021 at the Izu Velodrome, Japan. This class is for the cyclist who has impairments that affect their legs, arms, and/or trunk; they are still able to use a standard bicycle. 9 cyclists from 8 nations are competing in this event.
The women's individual pursuit class B track cycling event at the 2020 Summer Paralympics took place on 28 August 2021 at the Izu Velodrome, Japan. This class is for the cyclist who is blind or has visual impairments, thus they ride tandem bicycles with a sighted cyclist. There will be 9 pairs from 7 different nations competing.
The women's team pursuit at the 2022 Commonwealth Games was part of the cycling programme, and took place on 29 July 2022.
The men's individual pursuit at the 2022 Commonwealth Games was part of the cycling programme, which took place on 30 July 2022, at the Lee Valley VeloPark, Stratford, London, England.
The women's individual pursuit at the 2022 Commonwealth Games was part of the cycling programme, which took place on 30 July 2022, at the Lee Valley VeloPark, Stratford, London, England.