Men's sprint
at the 2021 UCI Track Cycling World Championships
VenueVélodrome Couvert Régional Jean Stablinski
LocationRoubaix, France
Dates23–24 October
Competitors30 from 21 nations
Medalists
gold medal    Netherlands
silver medal    Netherlands
bronze medal    France

The Men's sprint competition at the 2021 UCI Track Cycling World Championships was held on 23 and 24 October 2021.[1][2]

Results

Qualifying

The qualifying was started on 23 October at 12:24.[3] The top four riders advanced directly to the 1/8 finals; places 5 to 28 advance to the 1/16 final.

RankNameNationTimeBehindNotes
1Harrie Lavreysen Netherlands9.418Q
2Nicholas Paul Trinidad and Tobago9.421+0.003Q
3Mikhail IakovlevRussian Cycling Federation9.499+0.081Q
4Sébastien Vigier France9.583+0.165Q
5Mateusz Rudyk Poland9.641+0.223q
6Jeffrey Hoogland Netherlands9.666+0.248q
7Stefan Bötticher Germany9.686+0.268q
8Jair Tjon En Fa Suriname9.707+0.289q
9Rayan Helal France9.723+0.305q
10Daniel Rochna Poland9.788+0.370q
11Muhammad Shah Firdaus Sahrom Malaysia9.800+0.382q
12Nick Wammes Canada9.808+0.390q
13Anton Höhne Germany9.834+0.416q
14Kento Yamasaki Japan9.835+0.417q
15Joseph Truman Great Britain9.836+0.418q
16Sándor Szalontay Hungary9.858+0.440q
17Hamish Turnbull Great Britain9.931+0.513q
18Pavel YakushevskiyRussian Cycling Federation9.957+0.539q
19Kohei Terasaki Japan9.979+0.561q
20Kevin Quintero Colombia9.982+0.564q
21Juan Peralta Spain10.004+0.586q
22Martin Čechman Czech Republic10.029+0.611q
23Jai Angsuthasawit Thailand10.060+0.642q
24Vasilijus Lendel Lithuania10.139+0.721q
25Juan Ochoa Colombia10.201+0.783q
26Edgar Verdugo Mexico10.322+0.904q
27Norbert Szabo Romania10.375+0.957q
28Juan Ruiz Mexico10.406+0.988q
29Mitchell Sparrow South Africa10.485+1.067
30Mohamed Elyas Yusoff Singapore10.697+1.279

1/16 finals

The 1/16 finals were started on 23 October at 12:47.[4] Each heat winner advanced to the 1/8 finals.

HeatRankNameNationGapNotes
11Mateusz Rudyk PolandQ
12Juan Ruiz Mexico+0.109
21Jeffrey Hoogland NetherlandsQ
22Norbert Szabo Romania+0.084
31Stefan Bötticher GermanyQ
32Edgar Verdugo Mexico+0.142
41Jair Tjon En Fa SurinameQ
42Juan Ochoa Colombia+0.202
51Rayan Helal FranceQ
52Vasilijus Lendel Lithuania+0.238
61Daniel Rochna PolandQ
62Jai Angsuthasawit Thailand+0.045
71Muhammad Shah Firdaus Sahrom MalaysiaQ
72Martin Čechman Czech Republic+1.160
81Nick Wammes CanadaQ
82Juan Peralta Spain+0.161
91Anton Höhne GermanyQ
92Kevin Quintero Colombia+0.060
101Kento Yamasaki JapanQ
102Kohei Terasaki Japan+0.047
111Joseph Truman Great BritainQ
112Pavel YakushevskiyRussian Cycling Federation+0.057
122Hamish Turnbull Great BritainQ
121Sándor Szalontay Hungary+0.072

1/8 finals

The 1/8 finals were started on 23 October at 14:17.[5] Each heat winner advanced to the quarterfinals.

HeatRankNameNationGapNotes
11Harrie Lavreysen NetherlandsQ
12Hamish Turnbull Great Britain+0.951
21Nicholas Paul Trinidad and TobagoQ
22Joseph Truman Great Britain+0.595
31Mikhail IakovlevRussian Cycling FederationQ
32Kento Yamasaki Japan+0.021
41Sébastien Vigier FranceQ
42Anton Höhne Germany+0.222
51Mateusz Rudyk PolandQ
52Nick Wammes Canada+0.059
61Jeffrey Hoogland NetherlandsQ
62Muhammad Shah Firdaus Sahrom Malaysia+0.105
71Stefan Bötticher GermanyQ
72Daniel Rochna Poland+0.921
81Rayan Helal FranceQ
82Jair Tjon En Fa Suriname+0.114

Quarterfinals

The quarterfinals were started on 23 October at 17:52.[6] Matches were raced in a best-of-three format hereon; winners proceeded to the semifinals.

HeatRankNameNationRace 1Race 2Decider (i.r.)Notes
11Harrie Lavreysen NetherlandsXXQ
12Rayan Helal France+0.112+1.482
21Stefan Bötticher Germany+0.772XXQ
22Nicholas Paul Trinidad and TobagoX+0.009+0.037
31Jeffrey Hoogland Netherlands+0.001XXQ
32Mikhail IakovlevRussian Cycling FederationX+0.155+0.346
41Sébastien Vigier FranceXXQ
42Mateusz Rudyk Poland+0.101+0.852

Semifinals

The semifinals were started on 24 October at 13:00.[7] Matches were raced in a best-of-three format hereon; winners proceeded to the final, losers to the bronze medal race.

HeatRankNameNationRace 1Race 2Decider (i.r.)Notes
11Harrie Lavreysen NetherlandsXXQ
12Sébastien Vigier France+0.087+0.248
21Jeffrey Hoogland Netherlands+2.493XXQ
22Stefan Bötticher GermanyX+0.096+0.085

Finals

The finals were started on 24 October at 14:27.[8] Matches were raced in a best-of-three format hereon.

RankNameNationRace 1Race 2Decider (i.r.)
Gold medal race
1st place, gold medalist(s)Harrie Lavreysen NetherlandsXX
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Jeffrey Hoogland Netherlands+0.152+0.178
Bronze medal race
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Sébastien Vigier FranceX+0.035X
4Stefan Bötticher GermanyRELX+0.044

See also

References

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