Cycling at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Men's individual road race

The men's road race was one of 18 cycling events of the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. The race started and finished on 6 August at Fort Copacabana and was won by Greg Van Avermaet of Belgium. It was Belgium's first victory in the men's individual road race since 1952 and second overall, tying France and the Soviet Union for second-most behind Italy (five). Belgium matched Italy for most total medals, at seven. Jakob Fuglsang won Denmark's fourth silver medal in the event; the nation had yet to win gold. Rafał Majka's bronze was Poland's first medal in the event since 1980.

Men's cycling road race
at the Games of the XXXI Olympiad
View of the start of the Men's road race.
VenueFort Copacabana
241.5 km (150.1 mi)
Date6 August 2016
Competitors144 from 63 nations
Winning time6:10:05
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Greg Van Avermaet
 Belgium
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Jakob Fuglsang
 Denmark
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Rafał Majka
 Poland
← 2012
2020 →

Qualification

Nations could earn qualification spots primarily through UCI tours. The top five nations at the UCI World Tour earned five quota places, with nations further down the rankings earning progressively fewer quota places. There were also up to three places per nation available through continental tours and championships. Individuals could also earn places if their nation's ranking was insufficient. A few places were reserved for the host nation and Tripartite Commission invitations.[1]

Background

This was the 20th appearance of the event, previously held in 1896 and then at every Summer Olympics since 1936. It replaced the individual time trial event that had been held from 1912 to 1932; the time trial had been re-introduced in 1996 alongside the road race. Azerbaijan, the Dominican Republic, Kosovo, and Laos each made their debut in the men's individual road race. Great Britain made its 20th appearance in the event, the only nation to have competed in each appearance to date.

Pre-race favourites

Due to the grueling nature of the course, the riders expected to finish with a medal were all known for their climbing and descending skills.[according to whom?] Favorites heading into the race were Alejandro Valverde, Vincenzo Nibali, Chris Froome, Joaquim Rodríguez and Julian Alaphilippe.[2] If Froome had won gold, he would have become the first person to ever win Tour de France and the cycling road race in the same season.[3]

Course

The men's course was 241.5 km (150.1 mi) long. Starting at Fort Copacabana,[4] the peloton headed west to pass through Ipanema, Barra, and Reserva Maripendi Beaches via the coastal road leading to the 24.8 km (15.4 mi) Pontal / Grumari circuit loop.[5] After four laps of the Grumari sector (99.2 km of 241.5 km), the course returned east via the same coastal road to enter the 25.7 km (16.0 mi) Vista Chinesa Circuit loop at Gávea for three laps (77.1 km (47.9 mi) of 241.5 km (150.1 mi)) before finishing back at Fort Copacabana.[6] As with all road races in the Olympic Games, the athletes are escorted by law enforcement to keep traffic and bystanders out of harm's way. For the 2016 Olympics, escort for the riders is done by the Brazilian Federal Highway Police (PRF).

2016 Olympic cycling road course maps

2016 Olympic Cycling
Men's Road Course: 241.5 km
2016 Olympic Cycling
Grumari Circuit: 24.8 km
2016 Olympic Cycling
Vista Chinesa Circuit: 25.7 km

Schedule

All times are Brasília Time (UTC−3).

DateTimeRound
Saturday, 6 August 20169:30Final

Start list

The following NOCs had qualified riders to compete in the road race event. The following riders were confirmed by their respective NOCs.

NOCNumberAthletesRef
 Japan2Yukiya Arashiro
Kohei Uchima
 Kazakhstan2Bakhtiyar Kozhatayev
Andrey Zeits
 Kosovo1Qëndrim Guri
 Laos1Ariya Phounsavath
 Latvia2Toms Skujiņš
Aleksejs Saramotins
 Lithuania2Ramūnas Navardauskas
Ignatas Konovalovas
 Luxembourg1Fränk Schleck
 Morocco3Anass Aït El Abdia
Soufiane Haddi
Mouhssine Lahsaini
 Mexico1Luis Lemus
 Namibia1Dan Craven
 Netherlands4Tom Dumoulin
Steven Kruijswijk
Bauke Mollema
Wout Poels
[17]
 New Zealand2George Bennett
Zac Williams
 Norway4Edvald Boasson Hagen
Sven Erik Bystrøm
Vegard Stake Laengen
Lars Petter Nordhaug
 Poland4Maciej Bodnar
Michał Gołaś
Michał Kwiatkowski
Rafał Majka
 Portugal4André Cardoso
Rui Costa
José Mendes
Nelson Oliveira
 Puerto Rico1Brian Babilonia
 Romania1Serghei Țvetcov
 Russia3Sergey Chernetskiy
Alexey Kurbatov
Pavel Kochetkov
 Rwanda1Adrien Niyonshuti
 Serbia1Ivan Stević
 Slovakia1Patrik Tybor
 Slovenia4Matej Mohorič
Jan Polanc
Primož Roglič
Simon Špilak
 South Africa2Daryl Impey
Louis Meintjes
 South Korea2Kim Ok-cheol
Seo Joon-yong
 Spain5Jonathan Castroviejo
Imanol Erviti
Ion Izagirre
Joaquim Rodríguez
Alejandro Valverde
 Switzerland4Michael Albasini
Fabian Cancellara
Steve Morabito
Sébastien Reichenbach
[18]
 Tunisia1Ali Nouisri
 Turkey2Ahmet Örken
Onur Balkan
 Ukraine3Andriy Hrivko
Denys Kostyuk
Andriy Khripta
 United Arab Emirates1Yousif Mirza
 United States2Brent Bookwalter
Taylor Phinney
 Venezuela2Miguel Ubeto
Jonathan Monsalve

Results

In the table below, "s.t." indicates that the rider crossed the finish line in the same group as the cyclist before him, and was therefore credited with the same finishing time.[19][20]

RankCyclistNationTime
Greg Van Avermaet  Belgium6h 10' 05"
Jakob Fuglsang  Denmarks.t.
Rafał Majka  Poland+ 5"
4Julian Alaphilippe  France+ 22"
5Joaquim Rodríguez  Spains.t.
6Fabio Aru  Italys.t.
7Louis Meintjes  South Africas.t.
8Andrey Zeits  Kazakhstan+ 25"
9Tanel Kangert  Estonia+ 1' 47"
10Rui Costa  Portugal+ 2' 29"
11Geraint Thomas  Great Britains.t.
12Chris Froome  Great Britain+ 2' 58"
13Dan Martin  Irelands.t.
14Emanuel Buchmann  Germanys.t.
15Adam Yates  Great Britain+ 3' 03"
16Brent Bookwalter  United States+ 3' 31"
17Bauke Mollema  Netherlandss.t.
18Kristijan Đurasek  Croatias.t.
19Sébastien Reichenbach  Switzerlands.t.
20Fränk Schleck  Luxembourgs.t.
21Esteban Chaves  Colombia+ 3' 34"
22Serge Pauwels  Belgium+ 6' 12"
23Alexis Vuillermoz  Frances.t.
24Romain Bardet  Frances.t.
25Simon Clarke  Australias.t.
26Primož Roglič  Slovenia+ 9' 38"
27Yukiya Arashiro  Japans.t.
28Daryl Impey  South Africas.t.
29Nicolas Roche  Irelands.t.
30Alejandro Valverde  Spains.t.
31Sergey Chernetskiy  Russias.t.
32Christopher Juul-Jensen  Denmarks.t.
33George Bennett  New Zealand+ 11' 49"
34Fabian Cancellara  Switzerlands.t.
35Ramūnas Navardauskas  Lithuania+ 12' 18"
36André Cardoso  Portugals.t.
37Eduardo Sepúlveda  Argentinas.t.
38Pavel Kochetkov  Russias.t.
39Steven Kruijswijk  Netherlandss.t.
40Damiano Caruso  Italys.t.
41Andriy Hrivko  Ukraine+ 13' 18"
42Philippe Gilbert  Belgiums.t.
43Daniel Teklehaimanot  Eritrea+ 19' 20"
44Georg Preidler  Austria+ 19' 37"
45Patrik Tybor  Slovakia+ 20' 00"
46Aleksejs Saramotins  Latvias.t.
47Anass Aït El Abdia  Moroccos.t.
48Lars Petter Nordhaug  Norways.t.
49Kanstantsin Sivtsov  Belaruss.t.
50Vegard Stake Laengen  Norways.t.
51Ioannis Tamouridis  Greeces.t.
52Jan Polanc  Slovenias.t.
53José Mendes  Portugals.t.
54Andrey Amador  Costa Ricas.t.
55Michael Woods  Canadas.t.
56Michał Gołaś  Polands.t.
57Simon Špilak  Slovenias.t.
58Petr Vakoč  Czech Republics.t.
59Toms Skujiņš  Latvias.t.
60Chris Anker Sørensen  Denmarks.t.
61Bakhtiyar Kozhatayev  Kazakhstans.t.
62Michał Kwiatkowski  Polands.t.
63Alessandro De Marchi  Italy+ 20' 05"
Murilo Fischer  Brazil+ 31' 47"[21]
Ignatas Konovalovas  Lithuanias.t.[21]
Jonathan Castroviejo  SpainDNF
Imanol Erviti  SpainDNF
Ion Izagirre  SpainDNF
Sergio Henao  ColombiaDNF
Miguel Ángel López  ColombiaDNF
Jarlinson Pantano  ColombiaDNF
Rigoberto Urán  ColombiaDNF
Warren Barguil  FranceDNF
Steve Cummings  Great BritainDNF
Ian Stannard  Great BritainDNF
Rohan Dennis  AustraliaDNF
Scott Bowden  AustraliaDNF
Richie Porte  AustraliaDNF
Laurens De Plus  BelgiumDNF
Tim Wellens  BelgiumDNF
Tom Dumoulin  NetherlandsDNF
Wout Poels  NetherlandsDNF
Vincenzo Nibali  ItalyDNF
Diego Rosa  ItalyDNF
Michael Albasini  SwitzerlandDNF
Steve Morabito  SwitzerlandDNF
Simon Geschke  GermanyDNF
Maximilian Levy  GermanyDNF
Tony Martin  GermanyDNF
Edvald Boasson Hagen  NorwayDNF
Sven Erik Bystrøm  NorwayDNF
Maciej Bodnar  PolandDNF
Jan Bárta  Czech RepublicDNF
Leopold König  Czech RepublicDNF
Zdeněk Štybar  Czech RepublicDNF
Denys Kostyuk  UkraineDNF
Andriy Khripta  UkraineDNF
Matej Mohorič  SloveniaDNF
Ghader Mizbani  IranDNF
Arvin Moazzami  IranDNF
Samad Pourseyedi  IranDNF
Nelson Oliveira  PortugalDNF
Abderrahmane Mansouri  AlgeriaDNF
Youcef Reguigui  AlgeriaDNF
Stefan Denifl  AustriaDNF
Soufiane Haddi  MoroccoDNF
Mouhssine Lahsaini  MoroccoDNF
Taylor Phinney  United StatesDNF
Rein Taaramäe  EstoniaDNF
Zac Williams  New ZealandDNF
Antoine Duchesne  CanadaDNF
Hugo Houle  CanadaDNF
Vasil Kiryienka  BelarusDNF
Kohei Uchima  JapanDNF
Kim Ok-cheol  South KoreaDNF
Seo Joon-yong  South KoreaDNF
Jonathan Monsalve  VenezuelaDNF
Miguel Ubeto  VenezuelaDNF
Matija Kvasina  CroatiaDNF
Daniel Díaz  ArgentinaDNF
Maximiliano Richeze  ArgentinaDNF
Cheung King Lok  Hong KongDNF
José Luis Rodríguez Aguilar  ChileDNF
Adrien Niyonshuti  RwandaDNF
Maksym Averin  AzerbaijanDNF
Serghei Țvetcov  RomaniaDNF
Luis Lemus  MexicoDNF
Onur Balkan  TurkeyDNF
Ahmet Örken  TurkeyDNF
Kléber Ramos  BrazilDNF
Ali Nouisri  TunisiaDNF
Stefan Hristov  BulgariaDNF
Manuel Rodas  GuatemalaDNF
Byron Guamá  EcuadorDNF
Ivan Stević  SerbiaDNF
Tsgabu Grmay  EthiopiaDNF
Diego Milán  Dominican RepublicDNF
Dan Craven  NamibiaDNF
Óscar Soliz  BoliviaDNF
Qëndrim Guri  KosovoDNF
Brian Babilonia  Puerto RicoDNF
Yousif Mirza  United Arab EmiratesDNF
Ariya Phounsavath  LaosDNF
Alexey Kurbatov  RussiaDNF

References