Cycling at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Women's team pursuit

The women's team pursuit event at the 2020 Summer Olympics took place on 2 and 3 August 2021 at the Izu Velodrome.[1] 32 cyclists (8 teams of 4) from 8 nations competed.[2]

Women's team pursuit
at the Games of the XXXII Olympiad
Olympic track cycling
VenuesIzu Velodrome
Dates2–3 August 2021
Competitors38 from 8 nations
Teams8
Winning time4:04.249 WR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Franziska Brauße
Lisa Brennauer
Lisa Klein
Mieke Kröger
 Germany
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Katie Archibald
Laura Kenny
Neah Evans
Josie Knight
Elinor Barker
 Great Britain
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Megan Jastrab
Jennifer Valente
Chloé Dygert
Emma White
Lily Williams
 United States
← 2016
2024 →

Background

This will be the 3rd appearance of the event, which has been held at every Summer Olympics since its introduction in 2012.

The reigning Olympic champions are Katie Archibald, Laura Kenny, Elinor Barker, and Joanna Rowsell Shand of Great Britain; Great Britain has won both prior Olympic events (with Kenny and Rowsell Shand on both teams). The reigning (2020) World Champions are Jennifer Valente, Chloé Dygert, Emma White, and Lily Williams of the United States. Barker and Archibald were on the British 2020 World Championships silver medal team; Dygert and Valente were on the American 2016 Olympic silver medal team.

Russia, Germany, China, Great Britain, Australia, and the Netherlands are traditionally strong track cycling nations.[3]

Qualification

A National Olympic Committee (NOC) could enter up to 1 team of 4 cyclists in the team pursuit. Quota places are allocated to the NOC, which selects the cyclists. Qualification is entirely through the 2018–20 UCI nation rankings. The eight top nations in the rankings qualify for the team pursuit event. These nations also automatically qualified a team in the Madison.[2] Because qualification was complete by the end of the 2020 UCI Track Cycling World Championships on 1 March 2020 (the last event that contributed to the 2018–20 rankings), qualification was unaffected by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Competition format

A team pursuit race involves two teams of four cyclists. Each team starts at opposite sides of the track. There are two ways to win: finish 16 laps (4 km) before the other team does or catch the other team. The time for each team is determined by the third cyclist to cross the finish line; the fourth cyclist does not need to finish.

The tournament consists of three rounds:[4][5]

  • Qualifying round: Each team does a time trial for seeding. Only the top 4 teams are able to compete for the gold medal; the 5th place and lower teams can do no better than bronze.
  • First round: Four heats of 2 teams each. The top 4 teams are seeded against each other (1 vs. 4, 2 vs. 3) while the bottom 4 teams are seeded against each other (5 vs. 8, 6 vs. 7). The winners of the top bracket advance to the gold medal final. The other 6 teams are ranked by time and advance to finals based on those rankings.
  • Finals: Four finals, each with 2 teams. There is a gold medal final (gold and silver medals), a bronze medal final (bronze medal and 4th place), and 5th/6th and 7th/8th classification finals.

Schedule

All times are Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)[6]

DateTimeRound
2 August15:54Qualifying
3 August15:30First round
17:05Finals

Results

Qualifying

RankCountryCyclistsResult[7]Notes
1  GermanyFranziska Brauße
Lisa Brennauer
Lisa Klein
Mieke Kröger
4:07.307WR
2  Great BritainKatie Archibald
Laura Kenny
Elinor Barker
Josie Knight
4:09.022
3  United StatesJennifer Valente
Chloé Dygert
Emma White
Lily Williams
4:10.118
4  ItalyElisa Balsamo
Letizia Paternoster
Rachele Barbieri
Vittoria Guazzini
4:11.666
5  FranceVictoire Berteau
Marion Borras
Valentine Fortin
Marie Le Net
4:12.502
6  New ZealandHolly Edmondston
Bryony Botha
Kirstie James
Jaime Nielsen
4:12.536
7  AustraliaGeorgia Baker
Annette Edmondson
Ashlee Ankudinoff
Alexandra Manly
4:13.571
8  CanadaAllison Beveridge
Jasmin Duehring
Annie Foreman-Mackey
Georgia Simmerling
4:15.832

First round

RankHeatCountryCyclistsResult[8]Notes
14  GermanyFranziska Brauße
Lisa Brennauer
Lisa Klein
Mieke Kröger
4:06.159QG, WR
23  Great BritainKatie Archibald
Laura Kenny
Neah Evans
Josie Knight
4:06.748QG
33  United StatesMegan Jastrab
Jennifer Valente
Chloé Dygert
Emma White
4:07.562QB
42  CanadaAllison Beveridge
Ariane Bonhomme
Annie Foreman-Mackey
Georgia Simmerling
4:09.249QB
51  AustraliaGeorgia Baker
Annette Edmondson
Ashlee Ankudinoff
Maeve Plouffe
4:09.992
64  ItalyElisa Balsamo
Letizia Paternoster
Rachele Barbieri
Vittoria Guazzini
4:10.063
71  New ZealandHolly Edmondston
Bryony Botha
Rushlee Buchanan
Jaime Nielsen
4:10.223
82  FranceMarion Borras
Coralie Demay
Valentine Fortin
Marie Le Net
4:11.888

Finals

RankCountryCyclistsResult[9]Notes
Gold medal final
 GermanyFranziska Brauße
Lisa Brennauer
Lisa Klein
Mieke Kröger
4:04.242WR
 Great BritainKatie Archibald
Laura Kenny
Neah Evans
Josie Knight
4:10.607
Bronze medal final
 United StatesMegan Jastrab
Jennifer Valente
Chloé Dygert
Emma White
4:08.040
4  CanadaAllison Beveridge
Ariane Bonhomme
Annie Foreman-Mackey
Georgia Simmerling
4:10.552
Fifth place final
5  AustraliaGeorgia Baker
Annette Edmondson
Ashlee Ankudinoff
Maeve Plouffe
4:11.041
6  ItalyElisa Balsamo
Letizia Paternoster
Martina Alzini
Vittoria Guazzini
4:11.108
Seventh place final
7  FranceVictoire Berteau
Marion Borras
Valentine Fortin
Marie Le Net
4:10.388
8  New ZealandHolly Edmondston
Bryony Botha
Kirstie James
Jaime Nielsen
4:10.600

References