Cycling at the 1964 Summer Olympics – Men's individual road race

The men's individual road race was a road bicycle racing event held as part of the Cycling at the 1964 Summer Olympics programme. It was held on 22 October 1964. The course, just short of 25 kilometres, was covered 8 times for a total distance of 194.832 kilometres. 132 cyclists from 35 nations competed.[1] The maximum number of cyclists per nation was four. The event was won by Mario Zanin of Italy, the nation's second victory in the men's individual road race and third consecutive Games in the top two. Kjell Rodian earned Denmark's first medal in the event with his silver. Walter Godefroot's bronze was Belgium's fifth medal in five Games (with 2 in 1952 making up for missing the podium in 1956).

Men's cycling road race
at the Games of the XVIII Olympiad
The course, in red
VenueHachioji Road Race Course, Tokyo
194.83 km (121.1 mi)
Date22 October 1964
Competitors132 from 35 nations
Winning time4:39:51.63
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Mario Zanin
 Italy
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Kjell Rodian
 Denmark
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Walter Godefroot
 Belgium
← 1960
1968 →

Background

This was the seventh 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). Eddy Merckx of Belgium was the reigning world champion and the only one of the last four world champions to compete (the other three had all turned professional).[2]

The Republic of China, Hong Kong, Iran, Malaysia, Mongolia, the Philippines, and Thailand each made their debut in the men's individual road race. Great Britain made its seventh 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 eight laps of a 24.354 kilometres circuit starting at the Takao train station, for a total of 194.832 kilometres. It was a "relatively easy course" that "featured a fairly steep, but short, climb of 65 metres at the 11th km., followed by a short descent, and then a mild climb over the next few kilometres."[2] The course ran into Hachioji, across the Asakawa Bridge, to Sanyu Corner, then northwest to Tobuki Cross with a detour to Takatsuki Terminal, then back south to Takao station again. It was a shorter version of the team time trial course, which went out to the Hino Bridge before looping back to Sanyu Corner.[3]

Schedule

All times are Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)

DateTimeRound
Thursday, 22 October 196410:00Final

Results

Nobody was able to make a successful breakaway, with 99 riders closely bunched throughout the race. The best attempts all fell short with no effective tries in the last 15 kilometres. Merckx had a late effort with 1.5 kilometres left but never got more than 20 metres clear of the pack. Zanin and Rodian reached the front in the final sprint, though all 99 cyclists in the pack finished within two tenths of a second of Zanin. Precise order within the pack, particularly after 35th place, is disputed.[2]

RankCyclistNationTime
Mario Zanin  Italy4:39:51.63
Kjell Rodian  Denmark4:39:51.65
Walter Godefroot  Belgium4:39:51.74
4Raymond Bilney  Australia4:39:51.74
5José Manuel López  Spain4:39:51.74
6Wilfried Peffgen  United Team of Germany4:39:51.74
7Gösta Pettersson  Sweden4:39:51.74
8Delmo Delmastro  Argentina4:39:51.74
9Roberto Breppe  Argentina4:39:51.74
10Laurie Byers  New Zealand4:39:51.74
11Erik Pettersson  Sweden4:39:51.74
12Eddy Merckx  Belgium4:39:51.74
13Jan Kudra  Poland4:39:51.74
14Michael Hollingsworth  Australia4:39:51.74
15Ole Højlund Pedersen  Denmark4:39:51.74
16Hans Lüthi  Switzerland4:39:51.74
17Dick Johnstone  New Zealand4:39:51.74
18Roger Swerts  Belgium4:39:51.74
19Johny Schleck  Luxembourg4:39:51.74
20Bart Zoet  Netherlands4:39:51.74
21Flemming Hansen  Denmark4:39:51.74
22Daniel Gráč  Czechoslovakia4:39:51.74
23José Manuel Lasa  Spain4:39:51.74
24János Juszkó  Hungary4:39:51.74
25Colin Lewis  Great Britain4:39:51.74
26Terence West  Great Britain4:39:51.74
27Gerben Karstens  Netherlands4:39:51.74
28Severino Andreoli  Italy4:39:51.74
29Burkhard Ebert  United Team of Germany4:39:51.75
30Erwin Jaisli  Switzerland4:39:51.75
31Derek Harrison  Great Britain4:39:51.75
32Mariano Díaz  Spain4:39:51.75
33Felice Gimondi  Italy4:39:51.76
34Jorge Mariné  Spain4:39:51.76
35András Mészáros  Hungary4:39:51.76
36Chow Kwong Man  Hong Kong4:39:51.76
37Masashi Omiya  Japan4:39:51.76
38Jozef Boons  Belgium4:39:51.76
39Louis Pfenninger  Switzerland4:39:51.76
40Harry Steevens  Netherlands4:39:51.76
41Gainan Saidkhuzhin  Soviet Union4:39:51.77
42Jan Pieterse  Netherlands4:39:51.77
43Yanjingiin Baatar  Mongolia4:39:51.77
44Jan Magiera  Poland4:39:51.77
45Ricardo Vázquez  Uruguay4:39:51.78
46Martín Rodríguez  Colombia4:39:51.78
47Antal Megyerdi  Hungary4:39:51.78
48Francisco Pérez  Uruguay4:39:51.78
49Rubén Placanica  Argentina4:39:51.79
50Sven Hamrin  Sweden4:39:51.79
51Michael Cowley  Great Britain4:39:51.79
52Sture Pettersson  Sweden4:39:51.79
53Francis Bazire  France4:39:51.80
54Immo Rittmeyer  United Team of Germany4:39:51.80
55Pablo Hernández  Colombia4:39:51.80
56Anatoly Olizarenko  Soviet Union4:39:51.80
57Gabriel Moiceanu  Romania4:39:51.80
58Constantin Ciocan  Romania4:39:51.81
59Ion Cosma  Romania4:39:51.81
60Yury Melikhov  Soviet Union4:39:51.81
61Des Thomson  New Zealand4:39:51.81
62Aleksei Petrov  Soviet Union4:39:51.81
63Hans Heinemann  Switzerland4:39:51.82
64Vid Cencic  Uruguay4:39:51.82
65David Humphreys  Australia4:39:51.82
66Max Grace  New Zealand4:39:51.83
67Jiří Daler  Czechoslovakia4:39:51.83
68Malcolm McCredie  Australia4:39:51.83
69Rubén Darío Gómez  Colombia4:39:51.83
70František Řezáč  Czechoslovakia4:39:51.83
71Jan Smolík  Czechoslovakia4:39:51.83
72Stephen Lim  Malaysia4:39:51.83
73Arturo Romeo  Philippines4:39:51.83
74Ole Ritter  Denmark4:39:51.83
75John Allis  United States4:39:51.83
76Phạm Văn Sau  Vietnam4:39:51.83
77Andrzej Bławdzin  Poland4:39:51.83
78Günter Hoffmann  United Team of Germany4:39:51.83
79Mikael Saglimbeni  Ethiopia4:39:51.83
80Lucien Aimar  France4:39:51.83
81Mashallah Amin Sorour  Iran4:39:51.83
82Rajmund Zieliński  Poland4:39:51.83
83László Mahó  Hungary4:39:51.83
84Teófilo Toda  Peru4:39:51.83
85Luvsangiin Erkhemjamts  Mongolia4:39:51.83
86Her Jong-chau  Taiwan4:39:51.83
87Shue Ming-shu  Taiwan4:39:51.83
88Gheorghe Bădără  Romania4:39:51.83
89Tarwon Jirapan  Thailand4:39:51.83
90Trần Văn Nen  Vietnam4:39:51.83
91Pakdi Chillananda  Thailand4:39:51.83
92Chow Kwong Choi  Hong Kong4:39:51.83
93Melesio Soto  Mexico4:39:51.83
94Bernard Guyot  France4:39:51.83
95Christian Raymond  France4:39:51.83
96Edy Schütz  Luxembourg4:39:51.83
97Daniel Olivares  Philippines4:39:51.83
98Cornelio Padilla  Philippines4:39:51.83
99Sayed Esmail Hosseini  Iran4:39:51.83
100Michael Hiltner  United States4:59:54.00
101Akbar Poudeh  Iran4:59:59.00
102Wilde Baridón  Uruguay5:01:50.00
103Luvsangiin Buudai  Mongolia5:01:57.00
104Francisco Coronel  Mexico5:02:15.00
105Hiroshi Yamao  Japan5:10:40.00
106Toshiro Akamatsu  Japan5:27:10.00
107Lee Seon-bae  South Korea5:27:16
An Byeong-hun  South KoreaDNF
Chainarong Sophonpong  ThailandDNF
Davoud Akhlagi  IranDNF
Deng Chueng-hwai  TaiwanDNF
Ferruccio Manza  ItalyDNF
Fisihasion Ghebreyesus  EthiopiaDNF
Heriberto Díaz  MexicoDNF
Hwang Chang-sik  South KoreaDNF
Raymond Castilloux  United StatesDNF
Mario Escobar  ColombiaDNF
Michael Andrew  MalaysiaDNF
Norberto Arceo  PhilippinesDNF
Choijiljavyn Samand  MongoliaDNF
Suleman Ambaye  EthiopiaDNF
Hamid Supaat  MalaysiaDNF
Thomas Montemage  United StatesDNF
Vitool Charernratana  ThailandDNF
Wi Gyeong-yong  South KoreaDNF
Yemane Negassi  EthiopiaDNF
Zain Safar-ud-Din  MalaysiaDSQ
Nguyễn Văn Khoi  VietnamDSQ
Masanori Tsuji  JapanDSQ
Moises López  MexicoDSQ
Mok Sau Hei  Hong KongDSQ
Nguyễn Văn Ngan  VietnamDSQ

Notes

  • Tokyo Organizing Committee (1964). The Games of the XVIII Olympiad: Tokyo 1964, vol. 2.

References