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Cycling race From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Men's time trial of the 2010 UCI Road World Championships cycling event took place on 30 September in Melbourne (Geelong), Australia, the first time in the event's 77 times that it has been held in Australia.
2010 UCI Road World Championships | ||||||||||
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Race details | ||||||||||
Dates | September 30, 2010 | |||||||||
Stages | 1 | |||||||||
Distance | 45.6 km (28.33 mi) | |||||||||
Winning time | 58' 09.19" | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
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Fabian Cancellara defended his title, and in doing so, clinched a record fourth time trial world championship, recording a time more than a minute faster than any of his rivals. Great Britain's David Millar took silver, with Germany's Tony Martin claiming bronze. The two Australian entrants, Richie Porte and Michael Rogers, came in fourth and fifth respectively in their home country.[1]
The riders completed two laps on an up-and-downhill 22.7 km course for a total length of 45.6 km.[2]
Rank | Rider | Nation | Time |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Fabian Cancellara | Switzerland | 58' 09.19" |
2 | David Millar | Great Britain | + 1' 02.75" |
3 | Tony Martin | Germany | + 1' 12.49" |
4 | Richie Porte | Australia | + 1' 19.00" |
5 | Michael Rogers | Australia | + 2' 24.94" |
6 | Koos Moerenhout | Netherlands | + 2' 40.69" |
7 | Luis León Sánchez | Spain | + 2' 44.23" |
8 | David Zabriskie | United States | + 2' 51.41" |
9 | Maciej Bodnar | Poland | + 3' 00.70" |
10 | Gustav Larsson | Sweden | + 3' 01.02" |
11 | Bert Grabsch | Germany | + 3' 06.14" |
12 | Ignatas Konovalovas | Lithuania | + 3' 07.46" |
13 | Vladimir Gusev | Russia | + 3' 27.28" |
14 | Carlos Oyarzún | Chile | + 3' 30.54" |
15 | Nicolas Vogondy | France | + 3' 38.85" |
16 | Andriy Hryvko | Ukraine | + 3' 40.70" |
17 | Iván Gutiérrez | Spain | + 3' 42.56" |
18 | Alex Rasmussen | Denmark | + 3' 45.07" |
19 | Sylvain Chavanel | France | + 3' 59.84" |
20 | Janez Brajkovič | Slovenia | + 4' 03.97" |
21 | Artem Ovechkin | Russia | + 4' 06.89" |
22 | Dmitry Fofonov | Kazakhstan | + 4' 11.23" |
23 | Jack Bauer | New Zealand | + 4' 17.78" |
24 | Tejay van Garderen | United States | + 4' 40.89" |
25 | David McCann | Ireland | + 4' 52.60" |
26 | Svein Tuft | Canada | + 4' 55.15" |
27 | Martin Velits | Slovakia | + 5' 00.00" |
28 | Raivis Belohvoščiks | Latvia | + 5' 15.15" |
29 | Matías Médici | Argentina | + 5' 17.55" |
30 | Kanstantsin Sivtsov | Belarus | + 5' 23.48" |
31 | Michael Mørkøv | Denmark | + 5' 24.76" |
32 | Peter Velits | Slovakia | + 5' 26.34" |
33 | Tanel Kangert | Estonia | + 5' 30.12" |
34 | Andrey Zeits | Kazakhstan | + 5' 33.64" |
35 | Dominique Cornu | Belgium | + 5' 35.83" |
36 | Jos van Emden | Netherlands | + 5' 47.55" |
37 | Gordon McCauley | New Zealand | + 6' 55.96" |
38 | Jay Robert Thomson | South Africa | + 6' 59.38" |
39 | Jarosław Marycz | Poland | + 7' 24.34" |
40 | Esad Hasanović | Serbia | + 9' 02.58" |
41 | Reginald Douglas | Saint Kitts and Nevis | + 23' 08.48" |
42 | James Weekes | Saint Kitts and Nevis | + 23' 49.61" |
José Serpa | Colombia | DNS |
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