Battle of Honey Springs

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Rainbow jersey

The Men's team sprint at the 2011 UCI Track Cycling World Championships was held on March 23. 18 nations of 3 cyclists each participated in the contest. After the qualifying, the fastest 2 teams raced for gold, and 3rd and 4th teams raced for bronze.[1]

In January 2012, the French team were stripped of their world title, following the nullification of Grégory Baugé's 2011 results after a 12-month backdated ban for drug test infringements.[2][3]

Results

Qualifying

Qualifying was held at 17:15.[4]

Rank Name Nation Time Notes
1 Michaël D'Almeida
Grégory Baugé
Kévin Sireau
 France 43.951 Q
2 René Enders
Maximilian Levy
Stefan Nimke
 Germany 44.101 Q
3 Matthew Crampton
Chris Hoy
Jason Kenny
 United Kingdom 44.128 q
4 Jason Niblett
Scott Sunderland
Dan Ellis
 Australia 44.501 q
5 Sergey Kucherov
Denis Dmitriev
Pavel Yakushevskiy
 Russia 44.805
6 Sam Webster
Edward Dawkins
Ethan Mitchell
 New Zealand 45.032
7 Hugo Haak
Roy van den Berg
Teun Mulder
 Netherlands 45.047
8 Zhang Miao
Zhang Lei
Cheng Changsong
 China 45.112
9 Kamil Kuczyński
Damian Zieliński
Maciej Bielecki
 Poland 45.217
10 Kazuki Amagai
Yudai Nitta
Kazunari Watanabe
 Japan 45.462
11 Denis Špička
Tomáš Bábek
Adam Ptáčník
 Czech Republic 45.913
12 Dean Tracy
Michael Blatchford
Giddeon Massie
 United States 46.190
13 Juan Peralta Gascon
Ruben Donet Gregori
Itmar Esteban Herraiz
 Spain 46.294
14 Ángel Pulgar
César Marcano
Hersony Canelón
 Venezuela 46.309
15 Josiah Ng
Muhammad Md
Mohd Rizal Tisin
 Malaysia 46.470
16 Christian Tamayo
Rubén Murillo
Fabián Puerta
 Colombia 46.589
17 Konstantinos Christodoulou
Zafeirios Volikakis
Christos Volikakis
 Greece 46.724
18 Scott Mulder
Hugo Barrette
Thomas Hums
 Canada 46.876

Finals

The finals were held at 21:05.[5]

Rank Name Nation Time
Gold Medal Race
DSQ Michaël D'Almeida
Grégory Baugé
Kévin Sireau
 France 43.867
1st place, gold medalist(s) René Enders
Maximilian Levy
Stefan Nimke
 Germany 44.483
Bronze Medal Race
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Matthew Crampton
Chris Hoy
Jason Kenny
 United Kingdom 44.235
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Dan Ellis
Matthew Glaetzer
Jason Niblett
 Australia 45.241

References

  1. ^ "Start list" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-22. Retrieved 2011-03-23.
  2. ^ Stokes, Shane (6 January 2012). "UCI confirms Jason Kenny, Germany are upgraded to 2011 world track champions". VeloNation. VeloNation LLC. Retrieved 6 January 2012.
  3. ^ "Jason Kenny named world sprint champion after Bauge ban". BBC Sport. 6 January 2012. Retrieved 6 January 2012.
  4. ^ "Qualifying Results" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-04-09. Retrieved 2011-03-23.
  5. ^ "Final Results" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-22. Retrieved 2011-03-23.