Cycling at the 1992 Summer Olympics – Men's sprint

The men's sprint (track cycling) at the 1992 Summer Olympics (Cycling) was an event that consisted of cyclists making three laps around the track. Only the time for the last 200 metres of the 750 metres covered was counted as official time. The races were held on Tuesday, July 28, Wednesday, July 29, Thursday, July 30 and Friday, July 31, 1992 at the Velòdrom d'Horta.[1] There were 23 competitors from 23 nations, with each nation limited to one cyclist.[2] The event was won by Jens Fiedler of Germany, the first victory in the men's sprint for Germany as a unified nation since 1936 (though East Germany had won two gold medals since). Gary Neiwand of Australia took silver, the third time that nation had a runner-up in the event; Neiwand was only the fourth man to win multiple medals in the sprint (adding to his 1988 bronze). Canada earned its first medal in the men's sprint with Curt Harnett's bronze.

Men's sprint
at the Games of the XXV Olympiad
Jens Fiedler (2010)
VenueVelòdrom d'Horta
Dates28–31 July
Competitors23 from 23 nations
Medalists
Jens Fiedler
 Germany
Gary Neiwand
 Australia
Curt Harnett
 Canada

Background

This was the 20th appearance of the event, which has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1904 and 1912. Four of the quarterfinalists from 1988 returned: silver medalist Nikolai Kovsh of the Soviet Union (now representing the Unified Team), bronze medalist Gary Neiwand of Australia, sixth-place finisher Erik Schoefs of Belgium, and eighth-place finisher Maxwell Cheeseman of Trinidad and Tobago. East Germany had been dominant through reunification of Germany; Bill Huck and Jens Fiedler had won the last three world championships, and the last time anyone not from East Germany had won was 1982. With only one cyclist per nation allowed, Fiedler was selected for the German team and was the heavy favorite.[2]

Indonesia made its debut in the men's sprint; some former Soviet republics competed as the Unified Team. France made its 20th appearance, the only nation to have competed at every appearance of the event.

Competition format

This sprint competition involved a series of head-to-head matches along with the new qualifying round of time trials. There were five main match rounds, with two repechages. The first repechage had two rounds.[2][3]

  • Qualifying round: Each of the 23 competitors completed a 200 metre flying time trial (reaching full speed before timing started for the last 200 metres). The top 24 advanced to the match rounds, seeded based on their time in the qualifying round. With only 23 riders starting, nobody was eliminated.
  • Round 1: The 23 cyclists were seeded into 8 heats of 3 cyclists each, except that one heat had only 2 cyclists and a second was reduced to 2 by a withdrawal. The winner of each heat advanced to the 1/8 finals (8 cyclists) while the other cyclists went to the first repechage semifinals (14 cyclists).
  • First repechage semifinals: The 14 cyclists were divided into 7 heats, each with 2 cyclists. The winner of each heat advanced to the first repechage finals (7 cyclists) while the losers were eliminated (7 cyclists).
  • First repechage finals: The 7 cyclists were divided into 3 heats, two with 2 cyclists and one with 3 cyclists. The winners of each heat advanced to the 1/8 finals, along with the second-placed cyclist in the heat of 3 (4 cyclists). The last-place cyclist in each heat was eliminated (3 cyclists).
  • 1/8 finals: The 12 remaining cyclists competed in a 1/8 finals round. There were 4 heats in this round, with 3 cyclists in each. The top cyclist in each heat advanced to the quarterfinals (4 cyclists), while the remaining two in each heat went to the second repechage (8 cyclists).
  • Second repechage: This round featured 4 heats, with 2 cyclists each. The winner of each heat advanced to the quarterfinals (4 cyclists); the losers were eliminated (4 cyclists).
  • Quarterfinals: Beginning with the quarterfinals, all matches were one-on-one competitions and were held in best-of-three format. There were 4 quarterfinals, with the winner of each advancing to the semifinals and the loser going to the fifth-eighth classification race.
  • Semifinals: The two semifinals provided for advancement to the gold medal final for winners and to the bronze medal final for losers.
  • Finals: Both a gold medal final and a bronze medal final were held, as well as a classification final for fifth through eighth places for quarterfinal losers.

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 Vladimir Adamachvili (URS)10.099Moscow, Soviet Union6 August 1990
Olympic record Lutz Heßlich (GDR)10.395Seoul, South Korea21 September 1988

Three men broke the Olympic record in the qualifying round, in sequence: Curt Harnett clocked in at 10.368 seconds, Gary Neiwand at 10.330 seconds, and Jens Fiedler at 10.252 seconds.

Schedule

All times are Central European Summer Time (UTC+2)

Date Time Round
Tuesday, 28 July 199210:00
19:05
20:50
21:15
Qualifying round
Round 1
First repechage semifinals
First repechage finals
Wednesday, 29 July 199218:20
18:55
20:00
1/8 finals
Second repechage
Quarterfinals
Thursday, 30 July 199221:10Semifinals
Friday, 31 July 199218:40Finals

Results

Qualifying round

Held Tuesday, July 28.
Times and average speeds are listed.

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Jens Fiedler Germany10.25270.230Q, OR
2Gary Neiwand Australia10.33069.699Q
3Curt Harnett Canada10.36869.444Q
4Roberto Chiappa Italy10.51668.467Q
5José Manuel Moreno Spain10.55068.246Q
6Ken Carpenter United States10.56168.175Q
7Frédéric Magné France10.61767.815Q
8Ainārs Ķiksis Latvia10.74966.982Q
9Erik Schoefs Belgium10.81966.549Q
10Jaroslav Jeřábek Czechoslovakia10.87366.219Q
11Keiji Kojima Japan10.90266.042Q
12Rolf Furrer Switzerland10.93565.843Q
13José Lovito Argentina11.02465.312Q
14Nikolai Kovsh Unified Team11.03065.276Q
15Jhon González Colombia11.09764.882Q
16Jon Andrews New Zealand11.10264.853Q
17Dirk Jan van Hameren Netherlands11.28463.807Q
18Maxwell Cheeseman Trinidad and Tobago11.44862.893Q
19Livingstone Alleyne Barbados11.55962.289Q
20Andrew Myers Jamaica11.63361.892Q
21Tulus Widodo Kalimanto Indonesia11.69761.554Q
22Sean Bloch South Africa12.18659.084Q
23Pedro Vaca Bolivia12.24358.809Q

Round 1

Held Tuesday, July 28. The 1/16 round consisted of eight heats, seven of three riders and one of two riders. Winners advanced to the next round, losers competed in the repechage.

Heat 1

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Jens Fiedler Germany11.33963.497Q
2Jon Andrews New ZealandR

Heat 2

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Gary Neiwand Australia11.31963.609Q
2Jhon González ColombiaR
3Dirk Jan van Hameren NetherlandsR

Heat 3

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Curt Harnett Canada11.24864.011Q
2Nikolai Kovsh Unified TeamR
3Maxwell Cheeseman Trinidad and TobagoR

Heat 4

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1José Lovito Argentina11.33863.503Q
2Roberto Chiappa ItalyR
3Livingstone Alleyne BarbadosR

Heat 5

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1José Manuel Moreno Spain11.27863.841Q
2Rolf Furrer SwitzerlandR
3Andrew Myers JamaicaR

Heat 6

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Ken Carpenter United States10.98165.567Q
2Keiji Kojima JapanR
3Tulus Widodo Kalimanto IndonesiaR

Heat 7

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Frédéric Magné France11.23064.113Q
2Jaroslav Jeřábek CzechoslovakiaR
3Sean Bloch South AfricaR

Heat 8

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Erik Schoefs Belgium11.50562.581Q
2Ainārs Ķiksis LatviaR
Pedro Vaca BoliviaDNS

First repechage semifinals

Held Tuesday, July 28. The fourteen defeated cyclists from the first round took part in the 1/16 repechage. They raced in seven heats of two riders each. The winner of each heat advance to repechage finals.

First repechage semifinal 1

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Jon Andrews New Zealand11.25163.994Q
2Dirk Jan van Hameren Netherlands

First repechage semifinal 2

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Nikolai Kovsh Unified Team12.00060.000Q
2Shinichi Ota Japan

First repechage semifinal 3

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Roberto Chiappa Italy11.10664.829Q
2Maxwell Cheeseman Trinidad and Tobago

First repechage semifinal 4

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Rolf Furrer Switzerland11.70061.538Q
2Tulus Widodo Kalimanto Indonesia

First repechage semifinal 5

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Keiji Kojima Japan11.21264.216Q
2Andrew Myers Jamaica

First repechage semifinal 6

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Jaroslav Jeřábek Czechoslovakia11.53262.434Q
2Jhon González Colombia

First repechage semifinal 7

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Ainārs Ķiksis Latvia11.32763.564Q
2Sean Bloch South Africa

First repechage finals

Held Tuesday, July 28. The seven winning cyclists from the second round repechage took part in the final repechage. They raced in two heats of two riders and one heat of three riders. The winner of the first two heats and the top two from heat three advanced to the next round .

First repechage final 1

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Nikolai Kovsh Unified Team11.97160.145Q
2Jaroslav Jeřábek Czechoslovakia

First repechage final 2

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Jon Andrews New Zealand11.70161.533Q
2Rolf Furrer Switzerland

First repechage final 3

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Roberto Chiappa Italy11.26463.920Q
2Ainārs Ķiksis LatviaQ
3Keiji Kojima Japan

1/8 finals

Held Wednesday, July 29. The 1/8 finals consisted of four heats of three riders each. The winners of each heat advance to the next round, with losers getting another chance in the third round repechage.

1/8 final 1

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Jens Fiedler Germany11.28563.801Q
2Ainārs Ķiksis LatviaR
3Erik Schoefs BelgiumR

1/8 final 2

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Gary Neiwand Australia11.11264.794Q
2Frédéric Magné FranceR
3Roberto Chiappa ItalyR

1/8 final 3

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Curt Harnett Canada10.99465.490Q
2Jon Andrews New ZealandR
Ken Carpenter United StatesDSQR

1/8 final 4

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1José Manuel Moreno Spain11.21664.194Q
2Nikolai Kovsh Unified TeamR
3José Lovito ArgentinaR

Second repechage

Held Wednesday, July 29. The eight cyclists defeated in the third round competed in the third round repechage. Four heats of two riders were held. Winners rejoined the victors from the third round and advanced to the quarterfinals.

Second repechage heat 1

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1José Lovito Argentina11.26663.909Q
2Ainārs Ķiksis Latvia

Second repechage heat 2

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Ken Carpenter United States11.39063.213Q
2Frédéric Magné France

Second repechage heat 3

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Roberto Chiappa Italy11.13764.649Q
2Jon Andrews New Zealand

Second repechage heat 4

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1Nikolai Kovsh Unified Team11.57762.192Q
2Erik Schoefs Belgium

Quarterfinals

Held Wednesday, July 29. The eight riders that had advanced to the quarterfinals competed pairwise in four matches. Each match consisted of two races, with a potential third race being used as a tie-breaker if each cyclist won one of the first two races. All four quarterfinals matches were decided without a third race. Winners advanced to the semifinals, losers competed in a 5th to 8th place classification.

Quarterfinal 1

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3Notes
1Jens Fiedler Germany10.88311.322N/AQ
2Ken Carpenter United StatesN/AC

Quarterfinal 2

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3Notes
1Gary Neiwand Australia11.37511.576N/AQ
2José Lovito ArgentinaN/AC

Quarterfinal 3

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3Notes
1Curt Harnett Canada11.18311.161N/AQ
2Nikolai Kovsh Unified TeamN/AC

Quarterfinal 4

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3Notes
1Roberto Chiappa Italy11.13411.325N/AQ
2José Manuel Moreno SpainN/AC

Semifinals

Held Thursday, July 30. The four riders that had advanced to the semifinals competed pairwise in two matches. Each match consisted of two races, with a potential third race being used as a tie-breaker if each cyclist won one of the first two races. Winners advanced to the finals, losers competed in the bronze medal match.

Semifinal 1

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3Notes
1Jens Fiedler Germany10.79111.279N/AQ
2Roberto Chiappa ItalyN/AB

Semifinal 2

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3Notes
1Gary Neiwand Australia10.91211.293N/AQ
2Curt Harnett CanadaN/AB

Finals

Held Friday, July 31.

Classification 5-8

Held Friday, July 31. The 5-8 classification was a single race with all four riders that had lost in the quarterfinals taking place. The winner of the race received 5th place, with the others taking the three following places in order.

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Speed
km/h
5Ken Carpenter United States11.64861.813
6José Lovito Spain
7Nikolai Kovsh Unified Team
8José Manuel Moreno Spain

Bronze medal match

The bronze medal match was contested in a set of three races, with the winner of two races declared the winner.

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3
Curt Harnett Canada10.93011.102N/A
4Roberto Chiappa ItalyN/A

Gold medal match

The gold medal match was contested in a set of three races, with the winner of two races declared the winner.

RankCyclistNationRace 1Race 2Race 3
Jens Fiedler Germany10.77810.778N/A
Gary Neiwand AustraliaN/A

Final classification

RankCyclistNation
1Jens Fiedler Germany
2Gary Neiwand Australia
3Curt Harnett Canada
4Roberto Chiappa Italy
5Ken Carpenter United States
6José Lovito Argentina
7Nikolai Kovsh Unified Team
8José Manuel Moreno Spain

References

  1. "Cycling at the 1992 Barcelona Summer Games: Men's Sprint". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 29 July 2016.
  2. "Sprint, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  3. Official Report, vol. 5, p. 154.
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