Cycling at the 1952 Summer Olympics – Men's individual road race

The men's individual road race at the 1952 Summer Olympics was held on 2 August, the 2nd last day of the Olympics on an 11,2 km course running counter-clockwise from Käpylä through Pakila and Maunula and back to Käpylä. The course was circled seventeen times, so the total length of the competition was 190,4 km. About half of the road was hard-surfaced, the other half sand-surfaced. There were 154 entries from 31 nations and 111 participants from 30 nations.[1] Each nation could enter up to four cyclists; nations entering at least three cyclists had the scores of their best three finishers summed for the team road race event. The individual event was won by André Noyelle of Belgium, the nation's first victory in the men's individual road race. His teammate Robert Grondelaers took silver. Edi Ziegler earned Germany's first medal in the event since 1896 with his bronze.

Men's individual road race
at the Games of the XV Olympiad
The race
VenueKäpylä, Finland
Date2 August 1952
Competitors111 from 30 nations
Winning time5:06:03.4
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)André Noyelle
 Belgium
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Robert Grondelaers
 Belgium
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Edi Ziegler
 Germany
← 1948
1956 →

Background

This was the fourth appearance of the event, previously held in 1896 and then at every Summer Olympics since 1936. It replaced the individual time trial event that had been held from 1912 to 1932 (and which would be reintroduced alongside the road race in 1996). France had won the last two Olympic road races. Gianni Ghidini of Italy was the 1951 world champion.[2]

Japan, Romania, the Soviet Union, and Vietnam each made their debut in the men's individual road race. Great Britain made its fourth appearance in the event, the only nation to have competed in each appearance to date.

Competition format and course

The mass-start race was on a course that covered 17 laps of an 11.2 kilometres circuit on Koskelantie Street in Käpylä, for a total of 190.4 kilometres. The course was "not overly difficult in terms of climbs, but had few flat sections, consisting of rolling hills throughout."[2] Lapped cyclists were eliminated and could not finish.[3]

Schedule

All times are Eastern European Summer Time (UTC+3)

DateTimeRound
Saturday, 2 August 195211:00Final

Results

Mårtensson made an early attack, taking a 45-second lead during lap 6, but was caught by the peloton in lap 8. By halfway, there was a clear lead group of nine cyclists. The Belgian riders Noyelle, Grondelaers, and Victor broke away during lap 11, with Ziegler and Maenan joining them. Maenan fell away from the front pack at lap 14. Noyelle made his break at the start of lap 17, taking an easy lead to win the race. Grondelaers separated from the other two remaining leaders with five kilometres to go, taking silver. The bronze came down to a sprint between Ziegler and Victor, with the German winning to prevent a Belgian medal sweep.

Behind the lead pack, a bad crash in lap 9 resulted in about 20 cyclists falling, with many unable to continue due to damage to their bicycles. The remaining second group of 11 cyclists continued until lap 15, when Bruni separated into clear fifth place and the other 10 cyclists finished close together.[2][3]

RankCyclistNationTime
André Noyelle  Belgium5:06:03.4
Robert Grondelaers  Belgium5:06:51.2
Edi Ziegler  Germany5:07:47.5
4Lucien Victor  Belgium5:07:52.0
5Dino Bruni  Italy5:10:54.0
6Vincenzo Zucconelli  Italy5:11:16.5
7Gianni Ghidini  Italy5:11:16.8
8Oskar Zeissner  Germany5:11:18.5
9Hans Andresen  Denmark5:11:18.5
10Arend van 't Hoft  Netherlands5:11:19.0
11André Moes  Luxembourg5:11:19.0
12Jacques Anquetil  France5:11:19.0
13Alfred Tonello  France5:11:20.0
14Roger Ludwig  Luxembourg5:11:20.0
15Bruno Monti  Italy5:11.35.0
16Yngve Lundh  Sweden5:12:15.2
17Rolf Graf  Switzerland5:12:45.3
18Stig Mårtensson  Sweden5:13:00.0
19Jørgen Frank Rasmussen  Denmark5:14:09.4
20Josef Schraner  Switzerland5:15:06.1
21Allan Carlsson  Sweden5:16:19.1
22Jan Plantaz  Netherlands5:16:19.1
23Claude Rouer  France5:16:19.1
24Odd Berg  Norway5:17:30.2
25Erling Kristiansen  Norway5:17:30.2
26Desmond Robinson  Great Britain5:18:08.9
27Brian Robinson  Great Britain5:18:08.9
28Lorang Christiansen  Norway5:20:01.3
29Constantin Stănescu  Romania5:20:01.4
30Alois Lampert  Liechtenstein5:20:06.6
31Graham Vines  Great Britain5:22:33.2
32Donald Sheldon  United States5:22:33.3
33Virgilio Pereyra  Uruguay5:22:33.4
34Peter Pryor  Australia5:22:33.5
35Jim Nevin  Australia5:22:33.6
36Thomas O'Rourke  United States5:22:33.7
37Wedell Østergaard  Denmark5:22:34.1
38Luis Angel de los Santos  Uruguay5:22:34.3
39Hugo Machado  Uruguay5:23:33.7
40Yevgeny Klevtsov  Soviet Union5:23:34.0
41Marin Niculescu  Romania5:23:34.1
42Raino Koskenkorva  Finland5:23:34.6
43Ewald Hasler  Liechtenstein5:23:34.8
44Victor Georgescu  Romania5:24:27.5
45Ángel Romero  Mexico5:24:33.9
46Petar Georgiev  Bulgaria5:24:34.0
47Luu Quan  Vietnam5:24:34.1
48Paul Maue  Germany5:24:44.5
49Adrie Voorting  Netherlands5:24:44.6
50Fausto Lurati  Switzerland5:24:58.0
51Nicolas Morn  Luxembourg5:26:25.0
52Helge Hansen  Denmark5:27:08.8
Ken Caves  AustraliaDNF
Peter Nelson  AustraliaDNF
Walter Bortel  AustriaDNF
Franz Wimmer  AustriaDNF
Arthur Mannsbarth  AustriaDNF
Rik Van Looy  BelgiumDNF
Boyan Kotsev  BulgariaDNF
Ilya Velchev  BulgariaDNF
Milcho Rosev  BulgariaDNF
Hernán Masanés  ChileDNF
Héctor Droguett  ChileDNF
Héctor Mellado  ChileDNF
Hugo Miranda  ChileDNF
Jan Veselý  CzechoslovakiaDNF
Karel Nesl  CzechoslovakiaDNF
Milan Perič  CzechoslovakiaDNF
Stanislav Svoboda  CzechoslovakiaDNF
Paul Backman  FinlandDNF
Paul Nyman  FinlandDNF
Ruben Forsblom  FinlandDNF
Roland Bezamat  FranceDNF
Walter Becker  GermanyDNF
Leslie Ingman  Great BritainDNF
István Lang  HungaryDNF
István Schillerwein  HungaryDNF
Lajos Látó  HungaryDNF
Raj Kumar Mehra  IndiaDNF
Netai Bysack  IndiaDNF
Pradip Bode  IndiaDNF
Suprovat Chakravarty  IndiaDNF
Kihei Tomioka  JapanDNF
Masazumi Tajima  JapanDNF
Tadashi Kato  JapanDNF
Tamotsu Chikanari  JapanDNF
Gwon Ik-Hyeon  South KoreaDNF
Im Sang-Jo  South KoreaDNF
Kim Ho-Sun  South KoreaDNF
Jean Schmit  LuxembourgDNF
Francisco Lozano  MexicoDNF
Julio Cepeda  MexicoDNF
Ricardo García  MexicoDNF
Jules Maenen  NetherlandsDNF
Muhammad Naqi Mallick  PakistanDNF
Imtiaz Bhatti  PakistanDNF
Petre Nuță  RomaniaDNF
George Estman  South AfricaDNF
Alfred Swift  South AfricaDNF
Robert Fowler  South AfricaDNF
Anatoly Kolesov  Soviet UnionDNF
Nikolay Bobarenko  Soviet UnionDNF
Vladimir Kryuchkov  Soviet UnionDNF
Lars Nordwall  SwedenDNF
Kobi Scherer  SwitzerlandDNF
David Rhoads  United StatesDNF
Ronald Rhoads  United StatesDNF
Julio Sobrera  UruguayDNF
Chau Phuoc Vinh  VietnamDNF
Nguyen Duc Hien  VietnamDNF
Le Van Phuoc  VietnamDNF

References

Notes