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Denmark takes Madison gold

  • By VeloNews.com
  • Published Mar. 28, 2009
  • Updated Mar. 29, 2009 at 9:49 AM UTC

Pendleton scores another sprint title

By Agence France Presse

UCI world track championships-Day 4: The Danes pick up another gold in the Madison.

Photo: Casey B. Gibson

Denmark relieved Britain of yet another world crown when they won the men’s Madison gold at the world track cycling championships in Pruszkow, Poland, Saturday.

Australia took the silver with the Czech Republic claiming the bronze.

Defending champions Britain, featuring the two-man team of Mark Cavendish and fellow Manxman Peter Kennaugh, finished sixth at a lap down.

Kennaugh suffered a crash before the seventh of the 10 sprints where points can be picked up for the first four riders over the line during the 200-lap race.

The result means Denmark’s Alex Rasmussen claims his second gold of the championships.

An Olympic silver medalist in the team pursuit, Rasmussen was part of the Danish team that succeeded Britain as world team pursuit champions on Friday.

Britain started positively in the 50km race, sitting in third place with four points behind Denmark and Belgium after the third of 10 sprints. However, the Czech pairing of Martin Blaha and Jiri Hochmann threw the race wide open when they managed to gain a lap on the peloton prior to the fifth sprint, hoisting them up to first place despite not having claimed any points.

Denmark were a constant threat throughout the remainder, however, and took over pole position when they lapped the field before the ninth sprint.

Australia’s Cameron Meyer and Leigh Howard had had a quiet start, picking up only two points at the sixth sprint, but thanks to Meyer, the men’s points race winner, they also managed to lap the field to move up to second.

Cavendish, who won four stages on the Tour de France last year with his professional road team Columbia, had come to the championships in a bid to defend the world crown he won last year with Bradley Wiggins.

A former two-time winner of the Madison, Cavendish claimed his first gold, with Rob Hayles, in 2007.

Men’s Sprint

Britain’s gold medal hopes in the coveted track cycling sprint competition were virtually crushed by France, and plucky Malaysia in early rounds on Saturday.

English pair Jason Kenny, the Olympic silver medalist, and Matthew Crampton were both ousted by French opposition while Scotland’s Ross Edgar was beaten 2 1 in a decider by on-form Malaysian Azizulhasni Awang.

Frenchman Gregory Bauge, the fastest qualifier, has now emerged as the favorite to succeed absent defending champion Sir Chris Hoy after he made light work of Kenny in two straight legs.

Compatriot Kevin Sireau was as equally effective against up and coming Crampton, while Australian Shane Perkins ousted another Frenchman, Mickael Bourgain. However Bauge and Sireau will face each other in the semis, while Perkins, the current World Cup leader, will meet Azizulhasni.

Edgar had pulled level with Awang after the Malaysian took a 1-0 lead with one of his spectacular front wheel jumps at the finish line. But the Scot, an Olympic silver medalist in the keirin, was left rueing a tactical error in the decider when he gave Awang too much of a gap before trying in vain to close it on the final lap.

The semi-finals of the men’s sprint, considered the most coveted discipline of track cycling’s speed events, will be held Sunday, when the men’s final brings the curtain down on the championships.

Women’s sprint

Olympic champion Victoria Pendleton of Britain claimed her fourth world title in the women’s sprint on Saturday.

Dutchwoman Willy Kanis took the silver while Lithuanian Simona Krupeckaite took the bronze. Pendleton, the winner of world titles in the coveted speed event in 2008, 2007 and 2005, was given a scare on her way to victory when Kanis took the match to a decider after levelling with a superb second leg performance.

In a tight decider, the 28-year-old Englishwoman had to dig deep as Kanis held firm on the final lap before powering up the home straight to win with a few inches to spare at the finish line.

Moments later, she collapsed in tears into the arms of one of her coaches.

Krupeckaite, the newly-crowned women’s world 500m time trial champion, finished off Russian Olga Panarina in the match for the bronze medal.

Krupeckaite was heavily favored to meet Pendleton in the final after winning the women’s 500m time trial crown Wednesday in a new world record time.

Photo Gallery

Results

Collated results from the fourth day of the world track cycling championships Saturday



Men
Sprint
Qualifying (top 24 qualify)

1. Gregory Bauge (FRA) 9.930sec
2. Jason Kenny (GBR) 10.002
3. Kevin Sireau (FRA) 10.010
4. Mickael Bourgain (FRA) 10.040
5. Shane Perkins (AUS) 10.074
6. Matthew Crampton (GBR) 10.105
7. Zhang Lei (CHN) 10.116
8. Maximilian Levy (GER) 10.175
9. Michael d’Almeida (FRA) 10.184
10. Stefan Nimke (GER) 10.198
11. Ross Edgar (GBR) 10.202
12. Azizulhasni Awang (MAS) 10.210
13. Mohd Rizal Tisin (MAS) 10.232
14. Robert Forstemann (GER) 10.270
15. Lukasz Kwiatkowski (POL) 10.270
16. Teun Mulder (NED) 10.294
17. Scott Sunderland (AUS) 10.314
18. Andriy Vynokurov (UKR) 10.407
19. Josiah Ng (MAS) 10.439
20. Valentin Savitskiy (RUS) 10.453
21. Christos Volikakis (GRE) 10.464
22. Kazunari Watanabe (JPN) 10.488
23. Daniel Ellis (AUS) 10.489
24. Miao Zhang (CHN) 10.496
25. Denis Dmitriev (RUS) 10.513
26. Jason Niblett (AUS) 10.534
27. Adam Ptacnik (CZE) 10.565
28. Sergey Ruban (RUS) 10.584
29. Christopher Sellier (TRI) 10.601
30. Travis Smith (CAN) 10.603
31. Leonardo Narvaez (COL) 10.608
32. Wen Hao Li (CHN) 10.644
33. Edward Dawkins (NZL) 10.654
34. Tomas Babek (CZE) 10.658
35. Simon Van Velthooven (NZL) 10.666
36. Filip Ditzel (CZE) 10.709
37. Alfredo Moreno (ESP) 10.728
38. Clemens Selzer (AUT) 10.747
39. Hernan Sanchez (COL) 10.805
40. Jonathan Marin (COL) 10.826
41. Kazuya Narita (JPN) 10.829
42. Juan Peralta (ESP) 10.837
43. Yondi Schmidt (NED) 10.869
44. Itmar Esteban (ESP) 11.141

1st rd (winners to 2nd rd)
Gregory Bauge (FRA) 10.959 bt Miao Zhang (CHN)
Jason Kenny (GBR) 11.095 bt Daniel Ellis (AUS)
Kevin Sireau (FRA) 10.945 bt Kazunari Watanabe (JPN)
Mickael Bourgain (FRA) 10.500 bt Christos Volikakis (GRE)
Shane Perkins (AUS) 10.943 bt Valentin Savitskiy (RUS)
Matthew Crampton (GBR) 10.615 bt Josiah Ng (MAS)
Zhang Lei (CHN) 10.536 bt Andriy Vynokurov (UKR)
Maximilian Levy (GER) 11.138 bt Scott Sunderland (AUS)
Michael d’Almeida (FRA) 10.744 bt Teun Mulder (NED)
Stefan Nimke (GER) 10.737 bt Robert Forstemann (GER)
Ross Edgar (GBR) 10.671 bt Lukasz Kwiatkowski (POL)
Azizulhasni Awang (MAS) 11.167 bt Mohd Rizal Tisin (MAS)

2nd rd (winners to quarters losers to repechages)
Azizulhasni Awang (MAS) 10.535 bt Gregory Bauge (FRA)
Jason Kenny (GBR) 10.406 bt Ross Edgar (GBR)
Kevin Sireau (FRA) 10.622 bt Stefan Nimke (GER)
Mickael Bourgain (FRA) 10.787 bt Michael d’Almeida (FRA)
Shane Perkins (AUS) 10.732 bt Maximilian Levy (GER)
Matthew Crampton (GBR) 10.726 bt Zhang Lei (CHN)

Repechages (winners to quarters)
Gregory Bauge (FRA) 10.371 bt Michael d’Almeida (FRA) and Zhang Lei (CHN)
Ross Edgar (GBR) 10.839 bt Maximilian Levy (GER) and Stefan Nimke (GER)

Quarter-finals
Azizulhasni Awang (MAS) 10.406 and 10.871 bt Ross Edgar (GBR) 10.995
Gregory Bauge (FRA) 10.353 and 10.664 bt Jason Kenny (GBR)
Kevin Sireau (FRA) 10.487 and 10.506 bt Matthew Crampton (GBR)
Shane Perkins (AUS) 10.513 and 10.487 bt Mickael Bourgain (FRA)

Semi-finals (March 29)
Gregory Bauge (FRA) v Kevin Sireau (FRA)
Azizulhasni Awang (MAS) v Shane Perkins (AUS)

Madison (50km)
1. Denmark (Michael Morkov/Alex Rasmussen) 22 pts
2. Australia (Leigh Howard/Cameron Meyer) 2
3. Czech Republic (Martin Blaha/Jiri Hochmann) 0

At one lap:
4. Belgium (Kenny De Ketele/Tim Mertens) 17
5. Germany (Roger Kluge/Olaf Pollack) 15
6. Great Britain (Mark Cavendish/Peter Kennaugh) 13
7. Italy (Angelo Ciccone/Elia Viviani) 10
8. United States (Daniel Holloway/Colby Pearce) 7
9. Ukraine (Sergiy Lagkuti/Mykhaylo Radionov) 0
10. Switzerland (Alexander Aeschbach/Franco Marvulli) 0
11. Netherlands (Pim Ligthardt/Wim Stroetinga) 0
At two laps:
12. Spain 7
13. Poland 7
14. Argentina 6
15. Russia 3
16. France 1
17. Austria 0
18. Colombia 0

Women
Sprint
Finals

Victoria Pendleton (GBR) 11.897 and 11.714 bt Willy Kanis (NED) 11.665

Bronze medal
Simona Krupeckaite (LTU) 11.277 and 11.524 bt Olga Panarina (BLR)

Semi-finalsVictoria Pendleton (GBR) 11.183 and 11.942 bt Olga Panarina (BLR)

Willy Kanis (NED) 12.305 and 11.594 bt Simona Krupeckaite (LTU)

Omnium women
Final

1. Josephine Tomic (AUS) 26 pts
2. Tara Whitten (CAN) 27
3. Yvonne Hijgenaar (NED) 27
4. Elisa Frisoni (ITA) 28
5. Lesya Kalitovska (UKR) 29
6. Vilija Sereikaite (LTU) 34
7. Dalila Rodriguez (CUB) 39
8. Renata Dabrowska (POL) 40
9. Lada Kozlikova (CZE) 44
10. Anna Blyth (GBR) 44
11. Charlotte Becker (GER) 44
12. Gema Pascual (ESP) 52
13. Olga Slyusareva (RUS) 56
14. Kaytee Boyd (NZL) 61
15. Diao Xiao Juan (HKG) 61
16. Andrea Botero (COL) 68

Omnium: 200m flying start
1. Yvonne Hijgenaar (NED) 11.400sec
2. Anna Blyth (GBR) 11.552
3. Elisa Frisoni (ITA) 11.622
4. Vilija Sereikaite (LTU) 11.800

Omnium: Scratch
1. Tara Whitten (CAN)
2. Lesya Kalitovska (UKR)
3. Renata Dabrowska (POL)
4. Gema Pascual (ESP)

Omnium: Pursuit (2km):
1. Vilija Sereikaite (LTU) 2:20.682
2. Tara Whitten (CAN) 2:23.950
3. Lesya Kalitovska (UKR) 2:24.094
4. Josephine Tomic (AUS) 2:25.841

Omnium: Points race
1. Josephine Tomic (AUS)
2. Dalila Rodriguez (CUB)
3. Elisa Frisoni (ITA)
4. Charlotte Becker (GER)

Omnium: 500m
1. Yvonne Hijgenaar (NED) 35.242sec
2. Anna Blyth (GBR) 35.377
3. Elisa Frisoni (ITA) 35.458
4. Vilija Sereikaite (LTU) 35.660
Selected: 7. Josephine Tomic (AUS) 36.650

FILED UNDER: Race Report / Race Result / Track