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UCI Track Cycling World Championships From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Men's team sprint competition at the 2021 UCI Track Cycling World Championships was held on 20 October 2021.[1][2]
Men's team sprint at the 2021 UCI Track Cycling World Championships | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Venue | Vélodrome Couvert Régional Jean-Stablinski | |||||||||
Location | Roubaix, France | |||||||||
Dates | 20 October | |||||||||
Competitors | 41 from 13 nations | |||||||||
Teams | 13 | |||||||||
Winning time | 41.979 | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
The qualifying was started at 18:52.[3] The best eight teams advanced to the first round.
Rank | Nation | Time | Behind | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Netherlands Roy van den Berg Harrie Lavreysen Jeffrey Hoogland | 42.690 | Q | |
2 | France Florian Grengbo Sébastien Vigier Rayan Helal | 42.965 | +0.275 | Q |
3 | Germany Nik Schröter Stefan Bötticher Joachim Eilers | 43.251 | +0.561 | Q |
4 | Great Britain Alistair Fielding Hamish Turnbull Joseph Truman | 43.467 | +0.777 | Q |
5 | Russian Cycling Federation Ivan Gladyshev Alexander Sharapov Pavel Yakushevskiy | 43.860 | +1.170 | Q |
6 | Poland Mateusz Miłek Mateusz Rudyk Rafał Sarnecki | 43.898 | +1.208 | Q |
7 | Canada Ryan Dodyk Nick Wammes Hugo Barrette | 43.986 | +1.296 | Q |
8 | Japan Yuta Obara Kohei Terasaki Kento Yamasaki | 44.414 | +1.724 | Q |
9 | Czech Republic Matěj Bohuslávek Dominik Topinka Robin Wagner | 44.651 | +1.961 | |
10 | Kazakhstan Sergey Ponomaryov Dmitriy Rezanov Andrey Chugay | 45.340 | +2.650 | |
11 | Spain Alejandro Martínez Juan Peralta Ekain Jiménez | 45.460 | +2.770 | |
12 | India Jemsh Singh Keithellakpam Rojit Singh Yanglem Ronaldo Laitonjam | 45.469 | +2.779 | |
13 | Ukraine Mykhaylo-Yaroslav Dydko Bohdan Danylchuk Vladyslav Denysenko | 46.135 | +3.445 |
First round heats were held as follows:
Heat 1: 4th v 5th fastest
Heat 2: 3rd v 6th fastest
Heat 3: 2nd v 7th fastest
Heat 4: 1st v 8th fastest
The first round was started at 20:04.[4] The heat winners were ranked on time, from which the top two advanced to the gold medal race and the other two proceeded to the bronze medal race.
Heat | Rank | Nation | Time | Behind | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | Russian Cycling Federation Ivan Gladyshev Alexander Sharapov Pavel Yakushevskiy | 43.380 | QB | |
1 | 2 | Great Britain Alistair Fielding Hamish Turnbull Joseph Truman | 43.395 | +0.015 | |
2 | 1 | Germany Stefan Bötticher Marc Jurczyk Nik Schröter | 43.300 | QB | |
2 | 2 | Poland Mateusz Miłek Daniel Rochna Mateusz Rudyk | 43.623 | +0.323 | |
3 | 1 | France Florian Grengbo Rayan Helal Sébastien Vigier | 42.467 | QG | |
3 | 2 | Canada Hugo Barrette Ryan Dodyk Nick Wammes | 43.784 | +1.317 | |
4 | 1 | Netherlands Jeffrey Hoogland Harrie Lavreysen Roy van den Berg | 42.301 | QG | |
4 | 2 | Japan Yuta Obara Kohei Terasaki Kento Yamasaki | 44.164 | +1.863 |
The finals were started at 20:59.[5]
Rank | Nation | Time | Behind | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gold medal race | ||||
Netherlands Jeffrey Hoogland Harrie Lavreysen Roy van den Berg | 41.979 | |||
France Florian Grengbo Rayan Helal Sébastien Vigier | 42.550 | +0.571 | ||
Bronze medal race | ||||
Germany Stefan Bötticher Joachim Eilers Nik Schröter | 43.141 | |||
4 | Russian Cycling Federation Ivan Gladyshev Alexander Sharapov Pavel Yakushevskiy | 43.717 | +0.676 |
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