Cycling at the 1980 Summer Olympics – Men's individual road race

The men's individual road race was an event at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow. 115 cyclists from 32 nations took part.[1] The maximum number of cyclists per nation was four. The event was won by Sergei Sukhoruchenkov of the Soviet Union, the nation's second victory (after 1960; tying France for second-most behind Italy) in the men's individual road race. His teammate Yuri Barinov took bronze. Czesław Lang's silver put Poland on the podium in the event for the second straight Games.

Men's road race
at the Games of the XXII Olympiad
Soviet stamp commemorating Olympic cycling
VenueMoscow
Date28 July
Competitors115 from 32 nations
Winning time4:48:28
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Sergei Sukhoruchenkov
 Soviet Union
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Czesław Lang
 Poland
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Yuri Barinov
 Soviet Union
← 1976
1984 →

Background

This was the 11th 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). The traditional western powers (Italy, France, Belgium, Sweden) in the sport participated in the Moscow Games amid the American-led boycott. In previous years, the boycott would have had little effect on the competition, but in the late 1970s, the United States had its first international cycling star: Greg LeMond (who would turn professional in 1981 and never compete in the Olympics) who would have been the favorite. Instead, host-nation cyclist Sergei Sukhoruchenkov was the pick to win. Gilbert Glaus of Switzerland (1978) and Gianni Giacomini (1979) had won world championships and were also significant contenders.[2]

Libya and Zimbabwe each made their debut in the men's individual road race. Great Britain made its 11th appearance in the event, the only nation to have competed in each appearance to date.

Competition format and course

Map of the course

The mass-start race was on a 189 kilometre course at the Krylatskoye Sports Complex in Moscow.[2][3]

Schedule

All times are Moscow Time (UTC+3)

DateTimeRound
Monday, 28 July 198010:00Final

Results

Sukhoruchenkov broke away on lap 3, with a chase group including Glaus and Giacomini catching him on lap 5. Sukhoruchenkov broke away from that pack with 32 kilometres to go, riding by himself the rest of the way to the largest margin of victory in the event since 1896.[2]

RankCyclistNationTime
Sergei Sukhoruchenkov  Soviet Union4:48:28.9
Czesław Lang  Poland+ 2' 58"
Yuri Barinov  Soviet Unions.t.
4Thomas Barth  East Germany+ 7' 44"
5Tadeusz Wojtas  Polands.t.
6Anatoly Yarkin  Soviet Union+ 8' 26"
7Adri van der Poel  Netherlandss.t.
8Christian Faure  Frances.t.
9Marc Madiot  France+ 8' 32"
10Andreas Petermann  East Germany+ 8' 49"
11Gilbert Glaus  Switzerlands.t.
12Harry Hannus  Finlands.t.
13Jiří Škoda  Czechoslovakias.t.
14Marco Cattaneo  Italys.t.
15Jacques Hanegraaf  Netherlands+ 8' 52"
16Peter Jonsson  Sweden+ 9' 05"
17Vlastibor Konečný  Czechoslovakia+ 9' 10"
18Gianni Giacomini  Italys.t.
19Herbert Spindler  Austrias.t.
20Jesús Torres  Venezuelas.t.
21John Herety  Great Britains.t.
22Krzysztof Sujka  Polands.t.
23Yury Kashirin  Soviet Unions.t.
24Kari Puisto  Finlands.t.
25Michael Wilson  Australias.t.
26Peter Winnen  Netherlandss.t.
27Giuseppe Petito  Italys.t.
28András Takács  Hungarys.t.
29Richard Trinkler  Switzerland+ 12' 09"
30Francis Castaing  France+ 15' 39"
31Henning Jørgensen  Denmarks.t.
32Olaf Ludwig  East Germanys.t.
33Jacques van Meer  Netherlandss.t.
34Mario Medina  Venezuelas.t.
35Hubert Seiz  Switzerlands.t.
36Johann Traxler  Austria+ 17' 19"
37Ladislav Ferebauer  Czechoslovakias.t.
38Mauno Uusivirta  Finlands.t.
39Bernt Scheler  Swedens.t.
40Zoltán Halász  Hungarys.t.
41Billy Kerr  Irelands.t.
42Verner Blaudzun  Denmarks.t.
43Régis Clère  Frances.t.
44Anders Adamson  Sweden+ 17' 29"
45Stephen Roche  Ireland+ 20' 29"
46Luc De Smet  Belgium+ 20' 37"
47Jeff Williams  Great Britains.t.
48Jürg Luchs  Switzerlands.t.
49Neil Martin  Great Britains.t.
50Bruno Bulić  Yugoslavia+ 22' 07"
51György Szuromi  Hungary+ 24' 44"
52László Halász  Hungarys.t.
Kevin Bradshaw  AustraliaDNF
Remo Sansonetti  AustraliaDNF
Graham Seers  AustraliaDNF
Johann Lienhart  AustriaDNF
Jan Nevens  BelgiumDNF
Ronald Van Avermaet  BelgiumDNF
Jan Wijnants  BelgiumDNF
Gilson Alvaristo  BrazilDNF
José Carlos de Lima  BrazilDNF
Fernando Louro  BrazilDNF
Davis Pereira  BrazilDNF
Borislav Asenov  BulgariaDNF
Yordan Penchev  BulgariaDNF
Andon Petrov  BulgariaDNF
Nencho Staykov  BulgariaDNF
Joseph Evouna  CameroonDNF
Joseph Kono  CameroonDNF
Thomas Nyemeg  CameroonDNF
Nicolas Owona  CameroonDNF
Gregorio Aldo Arencibia  CubaDNF
Carlos Cardet  CubaDNF
Antonio Quintero  CubaDNF
Michal Klasa  CzechoslovakiaDNF
Allan Jacobsen  DenmarkDNF
Per Sandahl Jørgensen  DenmarkDNF
Zeragaber Gebrehiwot  EthiopiaDNF
Jemal Rogora  EthiopiaDNF
Tilahun Woldesenbet  EthiopiaDNF
Musse Yohannes  EthiopiaDNF
Sixten Wackström  FinlandDNF
Joseph Waugh  Great BritainDNF
Bernd Drogan  East GermanyDNF
Tony Lally  IrelandDNF
Alberto Minetti  ItalyDNF
Peter Aldridge  JamaicaDNF
Salloum Kaysar  LebanonDNF
Kamal Ghalayni  LebanonDNF
El-Munsif Ben Youssef  LibyaDNF
Ali Hamid El-Aila  LibyaDNF
Mohamed Ganfud  LibyaDNF
Nuri Kaheil  LibyaDNF
Joseph Farrugia  MaltaDNF
Carmel Muscat  MaltaDNF
Alfred Tonna  MaltaDNF
Luvsandagvyn Jargalsaikhan  MongoliaDNF
Batsükhiin Khayankhyarvaa  MongoliaDNF
Dorjpalamyn Tsolmon  MongoliaDNF
Dashjamtsyn Tömörbaatar  MongoliaDNF
Jan Jankiewicz  PolandDNF
Mircea Romaşcanu  RomaniaDNF
Teodor Vasile  RomaniaDNF
Maurizio Casadei  San MarinoDNF
Mats Gustafsson  SwedenDNF
Olinto Silva  VenezuelaDNF
Juan Arroyo  VenezuelaDNF
Vinko Polončič  YugoslaviaDNF
Bojan Ropret  YugoslaviaDNF
Bojan Udovič  YugoslaviaDNF
David Gillow  ZimbabweDNF
Michael McBeath  ZimbabweDNF
Kurt Zellhofer  AustriaDSQ
Albert Micallef  MaltaDSQ
Roberto Tomassini  San MarinoDSQ

References

External links