2011 UCI Road World Championships – Men's road race

Men's Individual Road Race
2011 UCI Road World Championships
Matthew Goss, Mark Cavendish and André Greipel on the podium
Race details
Date 25 September 2011
Distance 260 km (161.6 mi)
Winning time 5h 40' 27"[1]
Medalists
 Gold  Mark Cavendish (Great Britain)
 Silver  Matthew Goss (Australia)
 Bronze  André Greipel (Germany)
2011 UCI Road World Championships

Participating nations
Elite events
List of elite cyclists
Elite road race   men   women
Elite time trial   men   women
Under-23 events
Under-23 road race   men  
Under-23 time trial   men  
Junior events
Junior road race   men   women
Junior time trial   men   women
 

The Men's Road Race of the 2011 UCI Road World Championships cycling event took place on 25 September 2011 in Copenhagen, Denmark.

In a sprint to the finish line, Great Britain's Mark Cavendish became world champion after making his move down the right-hand side of the course, and just managed to hold off the rest of the field, to become his country's first road race world champion since Tom Simpson won the event in San Sebastián in 1965.[2] The silver medal went to Australia's Matthew Goss – a team-mate of Cavendish at the HTC–Highroad team[3] – with the bronze medal going to Germany's André Greipel.

Route

The race started in the square at Copenhagen City Hall. For the second consecutive time, the World Championship route started and finished in different locations, with the riders completing 28 km (17.4 mi) – including a 6 km (3.7 mi) neutralised section – before reaching the finishing circuit in Rudersdal. Having reached Rudersdal, the riders then completed seventeen laps of the 14 km (8.7 mi) circuit around the suburbs of Søllerød and Nærum, to make up the racing distance of 260 km (161.6 mi).[4]

Race report

The field started quickly, with an average speed close to 50 km/h (31 mph) for the first half-hour of racing, as breaks went and were brought back. Finally a breakaway formed, which consisted of seven riders: in the break were Oleg Chuzhda, Maxim Iglinsky, Tanel Kangert, Robert Kišerlovski, Pablo Lastras, Christian Poos and Anthony Roux. As the lead rose up to eight minutes, the Great Britain team began to increase the pace of the peloton to start chasing the group and lower their lead. The lead was brought back to about four minutes, mainly due to the work of Steve Cummings and David Millar.

At that point, a first attack came from the main group at the end of the eleventh lap. Johan Vansummeren accelerated and took Yoann Offredo and Luca Paolini with him. Soon after they were joined by Olivier Kaisen and Simon Clarke. These five riders began to eat into the lead break's advantage, with Offredo staying mostly at the back of the line with his teammate Roux up ahead.

Both groups ahead merged, creating a group of eleven riders at the front, as Christian Poos had dropped out and fell back into the peloton. The peloton itself, still being led by the British, had split as result of a fall in the thirteenth lap, causing some big names to fall back and never catch up with the main pack, including amongst others the defending champion Thor Hushovd, 2011 time trial world champion Tony Martin and quick finisher Greg Van Avermaet.

The pack closed the gap to about one minute, with several riders trying to bridge the gap between the peloton and the leading bunch in small groups. Eventually all riders were brought back, with Anthony Roux surviving the longest, only to be caught by his countryman Thomas Voeckler as he stormed past to form a new leading group in the penultimate lap together with Nicki Sørensen and Klaas Lodewyck. These three never got more than 25 seconds and were held very close by the peloton. Johnny Hoogerland managed to bridge the gap to the leaders, but was caught together with the three a few kilometres later. No riders managed to get away from the bunch after that, allowing Mark Cavendish to finish the work of his teammates in the sprint. Matthew Goss was a close second, while André Greipel needed a photo finish to hold off Fabian Cancellara for bronze. Jürgen Roelandts completed the top five.[5]

National qualification

After a meeting of the UCI Management Committee on 28 January 2011, the qualification system for the 2011 road race remained unchanged from 2010.[6] Results from January to the middle of August would count towards the qualification criteria on both the UCI World Tour and the UCI Continental Circuits across the world, with the rankings being determined upon the release of the numerous tour rankings on 15 August 2011.[7]

UCI World Tour

The top ten nations in the UCI World Tour rankings by individual nations, may register up to fourteen different riders, of which nine could compete in the event. A nation with less than nine riders in the individual classification of the UCI World Tour rankings would only be allowed to start the race with the number of riders that were classified. If this number is less than six, the country would still allocate six riders for the competition; but could still reach the original allocation via the Continental Circuits. Prior to that re-allocation, any unused allocations within the top ten placings are re-allocated to countries that were ranked eleventh downwards on 15 August 2011, until the places were filled.[6] Other countries could also enter teams into the race through individual riders in the World Tour rankings, if they had at least one rider in the top 100 placings overall, or had one rider listed outside the top 100, but still ranked.[7]

UCI Continental Circuits

In each of the five continental tours held beneath the UCI World Tour, places could be earned through the rankings by nation. As many as sixteen places were offered through one of these continental tours – through the UCI Europe Tour[6] – to as few as the overall winner of the UCI Oceania Tour. Similar to the UCI World Tour, other countries could also enter teams into the race through individual riders in their continental rankings, if they had at least one rider ranked overall.[7]

Entrants by country

[7]

14 to be enrolled, 9 to start
 Spain
 Italy
 Australia
 Belgium
 Germany
 United States
 Netherlands
 France
12 to be enrolled, 8 to start
 Great Britain
9 to be enrolled, 6 to start
 Luxembourg
 Morocco
 Colombia
 Venezuela
 Iran
 Slovenia
 Russia
 Portugal
 Poland
 Ukraine
 Croatia
 Denmark
6 to be enrolled, 4 to start
 Kazakhstan
 Norway
  Switzerland
5 to be enrolled, 3 to start
 Eritrea
 Brazil
 Argentina
 Chile
 Japan
 Turkey
 Lithuania
 Austria
 Czech Republic
 Estonia
 Belarus
 Bulgaria
 Sweden
 New Zealand
 Canada
 Ireland
 Slovakia
2 to be enrolled, 1 to start
 Costa Rica
 Latvia
 Algeria
 Cuba
 Uruguay
 Ecuador
 Hungary
 Greece
 Romania
 Serbia

Final classification

Of the race's 210 entrants, 177 completed the full distance of 260 km (161.6 mi).[1] 32 riders failed to finish the race and Roman Kreuziger pulled out due to a wrist injury prior to the race.[8]

Rank Rider Country Time
Mark Cavendish  Great Britain 5h 40' 27"
Matthew Goss  Australia s.t.
André Greipel  Germany s.t.
4 Fabian Cancellara   Switzerland s.t.
5 Jürgen Roelandts  Belgium s.t.
6 Romain Feillu  France s.t.
7 Borut Božič  Slovenia s.t.
8 Edvald Boasson Hagen  Norway s.t.
9 Óscar Freire  Spain s.t.
10 Tyler Farrar  United States s.t.
11 Denis Galimzyanov  Russia s.t.
12 Peter Sagan  Slovakia s.t.
13 Anthony Ravard  France s.t.
14 Daniele Bennati  Italy s.t.
15 Rui Costa  Portugal s.t.
16 Manuel Antonio Cardoso  Portugal s.t.
17 Philippe Gilbert  Belgium s.t.
18 Michael Mørkøv  Denmark s.t.
19 David Veilleux  Canada s.t.
20 Grega Bole  Slovenia s.t.
21 Pim Ligthart  Netherlands s.t.
22 Aleksejs Saramotins  Latvia s.t.
23 Denys Kostyuk  Ukraine s.t.
24 Taylor Phinney  United States s.t.
25 Gediminas Bagdonas  Lithuania s.t.
26 Jakob Fuglsang  Denmark s.t.
27 Yauheni Hutarovich  Belarus s.t.
28 Marek Rutkiewicz  Poland s.t.
29 Lars Boom  Netherlands s.t.
30 Takashi Miyazawa  Japan s.t.
31 Michał Kwiatkowski  Poland s.t.
32 Lars Bak  Denmark s.t.
33 Aleksandr Kuschynski  Belarus s.t.
34 Matija Kvasina  Croatia s.t.
35 Johnny Hoogerland  Netherlands s.t.
36 Matt Brammeier  Ireland s.t.
37 Yoann Offredo  France s.t.
38 Maciej Paterski  Poland s.t.
39 Thomas Löfkvist  Sweden s.t.
40 Sacha Modolo  Italy s.t.
41 André Cardoso  Portugal s.t.
42 Heinrich Haussler  Australia s.t.
43 Nicki Sørensen  Denmark s.t.
44 Maarten Tjallingii  Netherlands s.t.
45 Gorazd Štangelj  Slovenia s.t.
46 Thomas Rohregger  Austria s.t.
47 Gabriel Rasch  Norway s.t.
48 Nick Nuyens  Belgium s.t.
49 Juan José Haedo  Argentina s.t.
50 Janez Brajkovič  Slovenia s.t.
51 Nicolas Roche  Ireland s.t.
52 Björn Leukemans  Belgium s.t.
53 Tony Gallopin  France s.t.
54 Fredrik Kessiakoff  Sweden s.t.
55 Rene Mandri  Estonia s.t.
56 Oleg Chuzhda  Ukraine s.t.
57 Anders Lund  Denmark s.t.
58 Filipe Cardoso  Portugal s.t.
59 Ricardo Mestre  Portugal s.t.
60 Pieter Weening  Netherlands s.t.
61 José Joaquín Rojas  Spain s.t.
62 Bauke Mollema  Netherlands s.t.
63 Klaas Lodewyck  Belgium s.t.
64 Pavel Brutt  Russia s.t.
65 Brent Bookwalter  United States s.t.
66 Jure Kocjan  Slovenia s.t.
67 Ignatas Konovalovas  Lithuania s.t.
68 Peter Velits  Slovakia s.t.
69 Martin Velits  Slovakia s.t.
70 Sylvain Chavanel  France s.t.
71 Aidis Kruopis  Lithuania s.t.
72 Christopher Sutton  Australia s.t.
73 Grégory Rast   Switzerland s.t.
74 Baden Cooke  Australia s.t.
75 Danilo Hondo  Germany s.t.
76 Robert Kišerlovski  Croatia s.t.
77 Francesco Gavazzi  Italy s.t.
78 Carlos Barredo  Spain s.t.
79 Simon Gerrans  Australia s.t.
80 Elia Viviani  Italy s.t.
81 Geraint Thomas  Great Britain s.t.
82 Daniel Oss  Italy s.t.
83 Juan Manuel Gárate  Spain + 16"
84 Kurt Asle Arvesen  Norway + 16"
85 Vladimir Isaichev  Russia + 16"
86 Michael Albasini   Switzerland + 19"
87 Martin Kohler   Switzerland + 19"
88 Wout Poels  Netherlands + 19"
89 Steven Kruijswijk  Netherlands + 19"
90 Dan Martin  Ireland + 19"
91 Stuart O'Grady  Australia + 19"
92 Imanol Erviti  Spain + 19"
93 Kevin De Weert  Belgium + 19"
94 Ben King  United States + 19"
95 Juan Antonio Flecha  Spain + 19"
96 Marcel Sieberg  Germany + 26"
97 Pablo Lastras  Spain + 29"
98 Thomas Voeckler  France + 31"
99 Ian Stannard  Great Britain + 34"
100 Mathew Hayman  Australia + 34"
101 Michael Rogers  Australia + 38"
102 Simon Clarke  Australia + 38"
103 Manuel Quinziato  Italy + 42"
104 Matteo Tosatto  Italy + 49"
105 Kristijan Koren  Slovenia + 49"

Rank Rider Country Time
106 Luca Paolini  Italy + 52"
107 Giovanni Visconti  Italy + 1' 02"
108 Bradley Wiggins  Great Britain + 3' 14"
109 Olivier Kaisen  Belgium + 4' 00"
110 Mart Ojavee  Estonia + 4' 00"
111 John Degenkolb  Germany + 4' 00"
112 Maxim Iglinsky  Kazakhstan + 4' 00"
113 Anthony Roux  France + 6' 34"
114 David Millar  Great Britain + 8' 22"
115 Jeremy Hunt  Great Britain + 8' 22"
116 Miguel Ubeto  Venezuela + 8' 54"
117 Jonas Ljungblad  Sweden + 8' 54"
118 Greg Henderson  New Zealand + 8' 54"
119 Rafael Andriato  Brazil + 8' 54"
120 Fumiyuki Beppu  Japan + 8' 54"
121 Jack Bauer  New Zealand + 8' 54"
122 Nelson Oliveira  Portugal + 8' 54"
123 Mehdi Sohrabi  Iran + 8' 54"
124 José Serpa  Colombia + 8' 54"
125 Ioannis Tamouridis  Greece + 8' 54"
126 Hossein Askari  Iran + 8' 54"
127 Carlos José Ochoa  Venezuela + 8' 54"
128 Miguel Ángel Rubiano  Colombia + 8' 54"
129 Chris Anker Sørensen  Denmark + 8' 54"
130 Tomás Gil  Venezuela + 8' 54"
131 Christian Knees  Germany + 8' 54"
132 Lucas Sebastián Haedo  Argentina + 8' 54"
133 Yukiya Arashiro  Japan + 8' 54"
134 Andrei Nechita  Romania + 8' 54"
135 Rigoberto Urán  Colombia + 8' 54"
136 Maximiliano Richeze  Argentina + 8' 54"
137 Hrvoje Miholjević  Croatia + 8' 54"
138 Winner Anacona  Colombia + 8' 54"
139 Svein Tuft  Canada + 8' 54"
140 Radoslav Rogina  Croatia + 8' 54"
141 Iván Casas  Colombia + 8' 54"
142 Kristijan Đurasek  Croatia + 8' 54"
143 Daniel Teklehaymanot  Eritrea + 8' 54"
144 Yuriy Metlushenko  Ukraine + 8' 54"
145 Oleksandr Sheydyk  Ukraine + 8' 54"
146 Carlos Oyarzun  Chile + 8' 54"
147 Anatoliy Pakhtusov  Ukraine + 8' 54"
148 Gonzalo Garrido  Chile + 8' 54"
149 Gregory Panizo  Brazil + 8' 54"
150 Laurent Didier  Luxembourg + 8' 54"
151 Michał Gołaś  Poland + 8' 54"
152 Julian Dean  New Zealand + 8' 54"
153 Oleksandr Kvachuk  Ukraine + 8' 54"
154 Ben Gastauer  Luxembourg + 8' 54"
155 Maciej Bodnar  Poland + 8' 54"
156 Bartosz Huzarski  Poland + 8' 54"
157 Matthew Busche  United States + 8' 54"
158 Bernhard Eisel  Austria + 8' 54"
159 Mikhail Ignatiev  Russia + 8' 54"
160 Alexander Porsev  Russia + 8' 54"
161 Timofey Kritskiy  Russia + 8' 54"
162 Yevgeniy Nepomnyachshiy  Kazakhstan + 8' 54"
163 Sergey Renev  Kazakhstan + 8' 54"
164 Luis León Sánchez  Spain + 8' 54"
165 Niki Terpstra  Netherlands + 8' 54"
166 Tony Martin  Germany + 8' 54"
167 John Murphy  United States + 8' 54"
168 Kanstantsin Sivtsov  Belarus + 8' 54"
169 Dmitry Fofonov  Kazakhstan + 8' 54"
170 Thor Hushovd  Norway + 8' 54"
171 Andreas Klier  Germany + 8' 54"
172 Samuel Dumoulin  France + 8' 54"
173 Jeff Louder  United States + 8' 54"
174 Timmy Duggan  United States + 8' 54"
175 Greg Van Avermaet  Belgium + 9' 10"
176 Marcel Kittel  Germany + 9' 16"
177 Johan Vansummeren  Belgium + 9' 16"
Steve Cummings  Great Britain DNF
Tanel Kangert  Estonia DNF
Chris Froome  Great Britain DNF
Abdelati Saâdoune  Morocco DNF
Honorio Machado  Venezuela DNF
Amir Zargari  Iran DNF
Ferekalsi Debesay  Eritrea DNF
Jan Bárta  Czech Republic DNF
Andrei Sartassov  Chile DNF
Krisztián Lovassy  Hungary DNF
Semere Mengis  Eritrea DNF
Adil Jelloul  Morocco DNF
Bert Grabsch  Germany DNF
Jempy Drucker  Luxembourg DNF
Fränk Schleck  Luxembourg DNF
Ivan Stević  Serbia DNF
Michael Barry  Canada DNF
Stefan Denifl  Austria DNF
Tomislav Dančulović  Croatia DNF
Mert Mutlu  Turkey DNF
Leonardo Duque  Colombia DNF
Blel Kadri  France DNF
Petr Benčík  Czech Republic DNF
Artur García  Venezuela DNF
Andrew Talansky  United States DNF
Vicente Reynès  Spain DNF
Christian Poos  Luxembourg DNF
Adnane Aarbia  Morocco DNF
Mouhssine Lahsaini  Morocco DNF
Ismail Ayoune  Morocco DNF
Mohammed Said El Ammoury  Morocco DNF
Otávio Bulgarelli  Brazil DNF
Roman Kreuziger  Czech Republic DNS

References

  1. 1 2 "Final Results / Résultats finaux: Men's Road Race / Course en ligne – Hommes" (PDF). Sport Result. Tissot Timing. 25 September 2011. Retrieved 26 September 2011.
  2. Williams, Ollie (25 September 2011). "Mark Cavendish and Britain win road race title". BBC Sport. Retrieved 26 September 2011.
  3. Liew, Jonathan (25 September 2011). "Mark Cavendish sprints into history books with world title". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 26 September 2011.
  4. "Course for Road Races". Copenhagen 2011. Danmarks Cykle Union. Retrieved 26 September 2011.
  5. Cossins, Peter (25 September 2011). "Cavendish sprints out of nowhere to Worlds victory ahead of Goss". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. Retrieved 26 September 2011.
  6. 1 2 3 "Competitions Guide". UCI Sport and Technical Department. Union Cycliste Internationale. 17 August 2011. pp. 3–4. Retrieved 26 September 2011.
  7. 1 2 3 4 "Update of the qualifications at the 15th August 2011". UCI Sport and Technical Department. Union Cycliste Internationale. 15 August 2011. pp. 1–2. Retrieved 26 September 2011.
  8. "Kreuziger withdraws from Worlds road race". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. 22 September 2011. Retrieved 26 September 2011.

External links

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