1994 UCI Road World Championships – Men's time trial

Men's time trial
1994 UCI Road World Championships
Race details
Dates 25 August 1994
Stages 1
Winning time 49' 34"
Medalists
   Gold  Chris Boardman (GBR)
   Silver  Andrea Chiurato (ITA)
   Bronze  Jan Ullrich (GER)

The men's individual time trial (ITT) made its world championship debut on 25 August 1994 in Agrigento/Catania, Italy. It was added to the programme as a replacement for the team time trial.

The inaugural title was claimed by Chris Boardman, who also won the individual pursuit in that year's Track Cycling World Championships.

Final classification

RankRiderTime
1st, gold medalist(s)  Chris Boardman (GBR) 49' 34"
2nd, silver medalist(s)  Andrea Chiurato (ITA) + 48"
3rd, bronze medalist(s)  Jan Ullrich (GER) + 1' 51"
4  Erik Breukink (NED) + 2' 03"
5  Abraham Olano (ESP) + 2' 16"
6  Nico Emonds (BEL) + 2' 19"
7  Thierry Marie (FRA) + 2' 32"
8  Henk Vogels (AUS) + 2' 41"
9  Zenon Jaskuła (POL) + 2' 51"
10  Michael Rich (GER) + 3' 05"
11  Jan Karlsson (SWE) + 3' 09"
12  Melcior Mauri (ESP) + 3' 18"
13  Alex Zülle (SUI) + 3' 21"
14  Stephen Hodge (AUS) + 3' 27"
15  František Trkal (CZE) + 3' 32"
16  Magnus Åström (SWE) + 3' 37"
17  Scott Mercier (USA) + 3' 43"
18  Nico Mattan (BEL) + 3' 51"
19  Serhiy Honchar (UKR) + 4'
20  Luca Colombo (ITA) + 4' 02"
21  Evgeni Berzin (RUS) + 4' 19"
22  Servais Knaven (NED) + 4' 32"
23  Henrik Jacobsen (DEN) + 4' 34"
24  Artūras Kasputis (LTU) + 4' 36"
25  Pavel Padrnos (CZE) + 4' 38"
26  Eddy Seigneur (FRA) + 4' 41"
27  Jan-Bo Petersen (DEN) + 4' 41"
28  Ruben Antonio Pegorin (ARG) + 4' 47"
29  Ruslan Ivanov (MDA) + 5' 03"
30  Graeme Obree (GBR) + 5' 20"
31  Roman Jeker (SUI) + 5' 36"
32  Miroslav Lipták (SVK) + 5' 41"
33  Julio César Ortegón Luque (COL) + 5' 42"
34  Bernard Bocian (POL) + 5' 44"
35  Jacques Landry (CAN) + 5' 46"
36  Philip Collins (IRL) + 5' 50"
37  Mika Hietanen (FIN) + 5' 54"
38  Clay Moseley (USA) + 5' 55"
39  Igor Patenko (BLR) + 6' 06"
40  Stig Kristiansen (NOR) + 6' 12"
41  Sandi Papez (SLO) + 6' 21"
42  Serguei Ljboldine (RUS) + 6' 23"
43  Gorazd Štangelj (SLO) + 6' 38"
44  Igor Bonciucov (MDA) + 6' 40"
45  Markus Pinggera (AUT) + 6' 59"
46  Kari Myyryläinen (FIN) + 7' 13"
47  Volodimyr Duma (UKR) + 7' 42"
48  Raúl Montaña (COL) + 8' 12"
49  Gyorgy Imris (HUN) + 8' 38"
50  Dietmar Dietmar (AUT) + 8' 47"

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.