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2011 UCI Road World Championships – Men's road race


FieldValue
nameMen's Individual Road Race
image2011 Road World Championships Mens road race podium (cropped).jpg
image_captionMatthew Goss, Mark Cavendish and André Greipel on the podium
image_size250
series[2011 UCI Road World Championships](2011-uci-road-world-championships)
date25 September 2011
stages1
distance260
unitkm
time5h 40' 27"
typemedals
firstMark Cavendish
first_natGreat Britain
secondMatthew Goss
second_natAustralia
thirdAndré Greipel
third_natGermany
previous[2010](2010-uci-road-world-championships-men-s-road-race)
next[2012](2012-uci-road-world-championships-men-s-road-race)

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. The silver medal went to Australia's Matthew Goss – a team-mate of Cavendish on the team – 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 – including a 6 km neutralised section – before reaching the finishing circuit in Rudersdal. Having reached Rudersdal, the riders then completed seventeen laps of the 14 km circuit around the suburbs of Søllerød and Nærum, to make up the racing distance of 260 km.

Race report

The field started quickly, with an average speed close to 50 km/h 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.

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. 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.

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. 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.

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 – 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.

Entrants by country

Final classification

Of the race's 210 entrants, 177 completed the full distance of 260 km. 32 riders failed to finish the race and Roman Kreuziger pulled out due to a wrist injury prior to the race.

RankRiderCountryTime
[[File:gold medal icon.svg1]]Mark CavendishGBR5h 40' 27"
[[File:silver medal icon.svg1]]Matthew GossAUSs.t.
[[File:bronze medal icon.svg1]]André GreipelGERs.t.
4Fabian CancellaraSUIs.t.
5Jürgen RoelandtsBELs.t.
6Romain FeilluFRAs.t.
7Borut BožičSLOs.t.
8Edvald Boasson HagenNORs.t.
9Óscar FreireESPs.t.
10Tyler FarrarUSAs.t.
11Denis GalimzyanovRUSs.t.
12Peter SaganSVKs.t.
13Anthony RavardFRAs.t.
14Daniele BennatiITAs.t.
15Rui CostaPORs.t.
16Manuel Antonio CardosoPORs.t.
17Philippe GilbertBELs.t.
18Michael MørkøvDENs.t.
19David VeilleuxCANs.t.
20Grega BoleSLOs.t.
21Pim LigthartNEDs.t.
22Aleksejs SaramotinsLATs.t.
23Denys KostyukUKRs.t.
24Taylor PhinneyUSAs.t.
25Gediminas BagdonasLTUs.t.
26Jakob FuglsangDENs.t.
27Yauheni HutarovichBLRs.t.
28Marek RutkiewiczPOLs.t.
29Lars BoomNEDs.t.
30Takashi MiyazawaJPNs.t.
31Michał KwiatkowskiPOLs.t.
32Lars BakDENs.t.
33Aleksandr KuschynskiBLRs.t.
34Matija KvasinaCROs.t.
35Johnny HoogerlandNEDs.t.
36Matt BrammeierIRLs.t.
37Yoann OffredoFRAs.t.
38Maciej PaterskiPOLs.t.
39Thomas LöfkvistSWEs.t.
40Sacha ModoloITAs.t.
41André CardosoPORs.t.
42Heinrich HausslerAUSs.t.
43Nicki SørensenDENs.t.
44Maarten TjallingiiNEDs.t.
45Gorazd ŠtangeljSLOs.t.
46Thomas RohreggerAUTs.t.
47Gabriel RaschNORs.t.
48Nick NuyensBELs.t.
49Juan José HaedoARGs.t.
50Janez BrajkovičSLOs.t.
51Nicolas RocheIRLs.t.
52Björn LeukemansBELs.t.
53Tony GallopinFRAs.t.
54Fredrik KessiakoffSWEs.t.
55Rene MandriESTs.t.
56Oleg ChuzhdaUKRs.t.
57Anders LundDENs.t.
58Filipe CardosoPORs.t.
59Ricardo MestrePORs.t.
60Pieter WeeningNEDs.t.
61José Joaquín RojasESPs.t.
62Bauke MollemaNEDs.t.
63Klaas LodewyckBELs.t.
64Pavel BruttRUSs.t.
65Brent BookwalterUSAs.t.
66Jure KocjanSLOs.t.
67Ignatas KonovalovasLTUs.t.
68Peter VelitsSVKs.t.
69Martin VelitsSVKs.t.
70Sylvain ChavanelFRAs.t.
71Aidis KruopisLTUs.t.
72Christopher SuttonAUSs.t.
73Grégory RastSUIs.t.
74Baden CookeAUSs.t.
75Danilo HondoGERs.t.
76Robert KišerlovskiCROs.t.
77Francesco GavazziITAs.t.
78Carlos BarredoESPs.t.
79Simon GerransAUSs.t.
80Elia VivianiITAs.t.
81Geraint ThomasGBRs.t.
82Daniel OssITAs.t.
83Juan Manuel GárateESP+ 16"
84Kurt Asle ArvesenNOR+ 16"
85Vladimir IsaichevRUS+ 16"
86Michael AlbasiniSUI+ 19"
87Martin KohlerSUI+ 19"
88Wout PoelsNED+ 19"
89Steven KruijswijkNED+ 19"
90Dan MartinIRL+ 19"
91Stuart O'GradyAUS+ 19"
92Imanol ErvitiESP+ 19"
93Kevin De WeertBEL+ 19"
94Ben KingUSA+ 19"
95Juan Antonio FlechaESP+ 19"
96Marcel SiebergGER+ 26"
97Pablo LastrasESP+ 29"
98Thomas VoecklerFRA+ 31"
99Ian StannardGBR+ 34"
100Mathew HaymanAUS+ 34"
101Michael RogersAUS+ 38"
102Simon ClarkeAUS+ 38"
103Manuel QuinziatoITA+ 42"
104Matteo TosattoITA+ 49"
105Kristijan KorenSLO+ 49"
RankRiderCountryTime
106Luca PaoliniITA+ 52"
107Giovanni ViscontiITA+ 1' 02"
108Bradley WigginsGBR+ 3' 14"
109Olivier KaisenBEL+ 4' 00"
110Mart OjaveeEST+ 4' 00"
111John DegenkolbGER+ 4' 00"
112Maxim IglinskyKAZ+ 4' 00"
113Anthony RouxFRA+ 6' 34"
114David MillarGBR+ 8' 22"
115Jeremy HuntGBR+ 8' 22"
116Miguel UbetoVEN+ 8' 54"
117Jonas LjungbladSWE+ 8' 54"
118Greg HendersonNZL+ 8' 54"
119Rafael AndriatoBRA+ 8' 54"
120Fumiyuki BeppuJPN+ 8' 54"
121Jack BauerNZL+ 8' 54"
122Nelson OliveiraPOR+ 8' 54"
123Mehdi SohrabiIRN+ 8' 54"
124José Serpa+ 8' 54"
125Ioannis TamouridisGRE+ 8' 54"
126Hossein AskariIRN+ 8' 54"
127Carlos José OchoaVEN+ 8' 54"
128Miguel Ángel Rubiano+ 8' 54"
129Chris Anker SørensenDEN+ 8' 54"
130Tomás GilVEN+ 8' 54"
131Christian KneesGER+ 8' 54"
132Lucas Sebastián HaedoARG+ 8' 54"
133Yukiya ArashiroJPN+ 8' 54"
134Andrei NechitaROM+ 8' 54"
135Rigoberto Urán+ 8' 54"
136Maximiliano RichezeARG+ 8' 54"
137Hrvoje MiholjevićCRO+ 8' 54"
138Winner Anacona+ 8' 54"
139Svein TuftCAN+ 8' 54"
140Radoslav RoginaCRO+ 8' 54"
141Iván Casas+ 8' 54"
142Kristijan ĐurasekCRO+ 8' 54"
143Daniel TeklehaymanotERI+ 8' 54"
144Yuriy MetlushenkoUKR+ 8' 54"
145Oleksandr SheydykUKR+ 8' 54"
146Carlos OyarzunCHI+ 8' 54"
147Anatoliy PakhtusovUKR+ 8' 54"
148Gonzalo GarridoCHI+ 8' 54"
149Gregolry PanizoBRA+ 8' 54"
150Laurent DidierLUX+ 8' 54"
151Michał GołaśPOL+ 8' 54"
152Julian DeanNZL+ 8' 54"
153Oleksandr KvachukUKR+ 8' 54"
154Ben GastauerLUX+ 8' 54"
155Maciej BodnarPOL+ 8' 54"
156Bartosz HuzarskiPOL+ 8' 54"
157Matthew BuscheUSA+ 8' 54"
158Bernhard EiselAUT+ 8' 54"
159Mikhail IgnatievRUS+ 8' 54"
160Alexander PorsevRUS+ 8' 54"
161Timofey KritskiyRUS+ 8' 54"
162Yevgeniy NepomnyachshiyKAZ+ 8' 54"
163Sergey RenevKAZ+ 8' 54"
164Luis León SánchezESP+ 8' 54"
165Niki TerpstraNED+ 8' 54"
166Tony MartinGER+ 8' 54"
167John MurphyUSA+ 8' 54"
168Kanstantsin SivtsovBLR+ 8' 54"
169Dmitry FofonovKAZ+ 8' 54"
170Thor HushovdNOR+ 8' 54"
171Andreas KlierGER+ 8' 54"
172Samuel DumoulinFRA+ 8' 54"
173Jeff LouderUSA+ 8' 54"
174Timmy DugganUSA+ 8' 54"
175Greg Van AvermaetBEL+ 9' 10"
176Marcel KittelGER+ 9' 16"
177Johan VansummerenBEL+ 9' 16"
Steve CummingsGBRDNF
Tanel KangertESTDNF
Chris FroomeGBRDNF
Abdelati SaâdouneMARDNF
Honorio MachadoVENDNF
Amir ZargariIRNDNF
Ferekalsi DebesayERIDNF
Jan BártaCZEDNF
Andrei SartassovCHIDNF
Krisztián LovassyHUNDNF
Semere MengisERIDNF
Adil JelloulMARDNF
Bert GrabschDEUDNF
Jempy DruckerLUXDNF
Fränk SchleckLUXDNF
Ivan StevićSRBDNF
Michael BarryCANDNF
Stefan DeniflAUTDNF
Tomislav DančulovićCRODNF
Mert MutluTURDNF
Leonardo DuqueDNF
Blel KadriFRADNF
Petr BenčíkCZEDNF
Artur GarcíaVENDNF
Andrew TalanskyUSADNF
Vicente ReynésESPDNF
Christian PoosLUXDNF
Adnane AarbiaMARDNF
Mouhssine LahsainiMARDNF
Ismail AyouneMARDNF
Mohammed Said El AmmouryMARDNF
Otávio BulgarelliBRADNF
Roman KreuzigerCZEDNS

References

References

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