2018 UCI Track Cycling World Championships – Men's sprint

Men's sprint
at the 2018 UCI Track Cycling World Championships
Venue Omnisport Apeldoorn
Location Apeldoorn, Netherlands
Dates 2–3 March
Competitors 35 from 19 nations
Medalists
    Australia
    Great Britain
    France

The Men's sprint competition at the 2018 UCI Track Cycling World Championships was held on 2 and 3 March 2018.[1][2]

Results

Qualifying

The top four riders advanced directly to the 1/8 finals; places 5 to 28 advanced to the 1/16 final.[3]

RankNameNationTimeBehindNotes
1Jeffrey Hoogland Netherlands9.674Q
2Matthew Glaetzer Australia9.677+0.003Q
3Sebastien Vigier France9.701+0.027Q
4Harrie Lavreysen Netherlands9.709+0.035Q
5Jack Carlin Great Britain9.715+0.041q
6Mateusz Rudyk Poland9.728+0.068q
7Denis Dmitriev Russia9.754+0.080q
8Ryan Owens Great Britain9.759+0.085q
9Melvin Landerneau France9.787+0.113q
10Vasilijus Lendel Lithuania9.788+0.114q
11Ethan Mitchell New Zealand9.805+0.131q
12Stefan Ritter Canada9.828+0.154q
13Eddie Dawkins New Zealand9.843+0.169q
14Fabián Puerta Colombia9.852+0.178q
15Rayan Helal France9.878+0.204q
16Pavel Yakushevskiy Russia9.920+0.246q
17Maximilian Levy Germany9.923+0.249q
18Hugo Barrette Canada9.934+0.260q
19Kazunari Watanabe Japan9.944+0.270q
20Martin Čechman Czech Republic9.959+0.285q
21Yuta Wakimoto Japan9.962+0.288q
22Damian Zieliński Poland9.968+0.294q
23Tomoyuki Kawabata Japan9.969+0.295q
24Sam Webster New Zealand10.002+0.328q
25Im Chae-bin South Korea10.030+0.356q
26Eric Engler Germany10.056+0.382q
27Nikita Shurshin Russia10.070+0.396q
28Azizulhasni Awang Malaysia10.072+0.398q
29Andriy Vynokurov Ukraine10.103+0.429
30Juan Peralta Spain10.112+0.438
31Jair Tjon En Fa Suriname10.137+0.463
32David Sojka Czech Republic10.203+0.529
33Svajūnas Jonauskas Lithuania10.243+0.569
34Muhammad Sahrom Malaysia10.293+0.619
35Sotirios Bretas Greece10.498+0.824

1/16 finals

Heat winners advanced to the 1/8 finals.[4]

HeatRankNameNationGapNotes
11Jack Carlin Great BritainQ
12Azizulhasni Awang Malaysia+0.052
21Mateusz Rudyk PolandQ
22Nikita Shurshin Russia+0.039
31Denis Dmitriev RussiaQ
32Eric Engler Germany+0.290
41Ryan Owens Great BritainQ
42Im Chae-bin South Korea+0.071
51Melvin Landerneau FranceQ
52Sam Webster New Zealand+0.049
61Vasilijus Lendel LithuaniaQ
62Tomoyuki Kawabata Japan+0.131
71Ethan Mitchell New ZealandQ
72Damian Zieliński Poland+0.057
81Yuta Wakimoto JapanQ
82Stefan Ritter Canada+0.083
91Eddie Dawkins New ZealandQ
92Martin Čechman Czech Republic+0.037
101Kazunari Watanabe JapanQ
102Fabián Puerta ColombiaREL
111Rayan Helal FranceQ
112Hugo Barrette Canada+0.299
121Maximilian Levy GermanyQ
122Pavel Yakushevskiy Russia+0.055

1/8 finals

Heat winners advanced to the quarterfinals.[5]

HeatRankNameNationGapNotes
11Maximilian Levy GermanyQ
12Jeffrey Hoogland Netherlands+0.019
21Matthew Glaetzer AustraliaQ
22Rayan Helal France+0.268
31Sebastien Vigier FranceQ
32Kazunari Watanabe Japan+0.146
41Eddie Dawkins New ZealandQ
42Harrie Lavreysen Netherlands+0.022
51Jack Carlin Great BritainQ
52Yuta Wakimoto Japan+0.052
61Mateusz Rudyk PolandQ
62Ethan Mitchell New Zealand+0.214
71Denis Dmitriev RussiaQ
72Vasilijus Lendel Lithuania+0.297
81Ryan Owens Great BritainQ
82Melvin Landerneau France+0.033

Quarterfinals

Matches were extended to a best-of-three format hereon; winners proceeded to the semifinals.[6]

HeatRankNameNationRace 1Race 2Decider (i.r.)Notes
11Maximilian Levy GermanyXXQ
12Ryan Owens Great Britain+0.059+0.133
21Matthew Glaetzer AustraliaXXQ
22Denis Dmitriev Russia+0.192+0.092
31Sebastien Vigier FranceXXQ
32Mateusz Rudyk Poland+0.102+0.024
41Jack Carlin Great BritainXXQ
42Eddie Dawkins New Zealand+0.001+0.561

Semifinals

Matches were extended to a best-of-three format hereon; winners proceeded to the final.[7]

HeatRankNameNationRace 1Race 2Decider (i.r.)Notes
11Jack Carlin Great BritainXXQ
12Maximilian Levy Germany+0.053+0.118
21Matthew Glaetzer AustraliaXXQ
22Sebastien Vigier France+0.252+0.144

Finals

The final classification were determined in the medal finals.[8]

RankNameNationRace 1Race 2Decider (i.r.)
Gold medal race
1st, gold medalist(s)Matthew Glaetzer AustraliaXX
2nd, silver medalist(s)Jack Carlin Great Britain+0.045+0.098
Bronze medal race
3rd, bronze medalist(s)Sebastien Vigier FranceXX
4Maximilian Levy Germany+0.023+0.090

References

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