2010–11 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics

The 2010–2011 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics was a multi race tournament over a season of track cycling. The season ran from 2 December 2010 to 20 February 2011. The World Cup is organised by the Union Cycliste Internationale.

2010–2011 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics
Nineteenth edition of the UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics
Details
Dates2 December 2010 – 20 February 2011
LocationAustralia, Colombia, China and United Kingdom
Races4

As in the previous season, the rounds were held in Melbourne (Australia), Cali (Colombia), Beijing (China) and Manchester (Great Britain) although there was a slight reshuffling with Manchester moving from the first round to the last.

In a change to the format of World Cup events, only the Olympic events (Keirin, Omnium, sprint, team sprint and team pursuit) were contested at each round. The other World Championships events were contested at one or two rounds only.

Overall team standings edit

Overall team standings are calculated based on total number of points gained by the team's riders in each event. The top ten teams after round 4 are listed below:[1]

Rank Team Round 1 Round 2 Round 3 Round 4 Total Points
1   France 61 100 80 67 308
2   United Kingdom 82 109 51 60 302
3   Australia 85 13 42 78 218
4   New Zealand 47 62 45 55 209
5   Netherlands 70 62 49 181
6   Germany 43 53 25 38 159
7   China 31 5 60 46 142
8   Spain 31 32 21 26 110
9   Canada 27 36 39 102
10   Russia 23 13 47 15 98

Results edit

Men edit

Event Winner Second Third
  Australia, Melbourne — 2–4 December 2010[2]
Sprint   Shane Perkins (AUS)   Jason Kenny (GBR)   Teun Mulder (NED)
Team pursuit   Australia
Jack Bobridge
Michael Hepburn
Leigh Howard
Cameron Meyer
4:56.913
  Russia
Alexander Khatuntsev
Evgeny Kovalev
Alexei Markov
Alexander Serov
4:02.354
  Great Britain
Ed Clancy
Steven Burke
Luke Rowe
Andrew Tennant
4:01.456
Team sprint   Great Britain
Jason Kenny
Matthew Crampton
Chris Hoy
43.829
  New Zealand
Edward Dawkins
Ethan Mitchell
Sam Webster
44.339
  Australia (Team Jayco–AIS)
Daniel Ellis
Jason Niblett
Shane Perkins
44.545
Keirin   Chris Hoy (GBR)   Teun Mulder (GER)   Mickaël Bourgain (FRA)
Omnium   Shane Archbold (NZL)
24 pts
  Zachary Bell (CAN)
31 pts
  Ed Clancy (GBR)
35 pts
Madison   Australia
Cameron Meyer
Leigh Howard
10 pts
  New Zealand
Aaron Gate
Myron Simpson
14 pts, -1 lap
  Netherlands
Nick Stopler
Peter Schep
10 pts, -1 lap
  Colombia, Cali — 16–18 December 2010[3]
Sprint   Kévin Sireau (FRA)   Chris Hoy (GBR)   Teun Mulder (GER)
Team pursuit   New Zealand
Sam Bewley
Westley Gough
Marc Ryan
Jesse Sergent
4:00.637
  Colombia
Juan Esteban Arango
Edwin Ávila
Arles Castro
Weimar Roldán
4:07.408
  Spain
Pablo Aitor Bernal
Sergi Escobar
David Muntaner
Eloy Teruel Rovira
4:07.439
Team sprint   France
Grégory Baugé
Michaël D'Almeida
Kévin Sireau
43.539
  Great Britain
Matthew Crampton
Chris Hoy
Jason Kenny
43.830
  New Zealand
Edward Dawkins
Ethan Mitchell
Sam Webster
44.118
Keirin   Azizulhasni Awang (MYS) (YSD Track Team)   François Pervis (FRA) (Cofidis)   Denis Špička (CZE)
Scratch race   Morgan Kneisky (FRA)   Gijs van Hoecke (BEL)   Martin Bláha (CZE)
Omnium   Ed Clancy (GBR)
24 pts
  Juan Esteban Arango (COL)
26 pts
  Zachary Bell (CAN)
27 pts
  China, Beijing — 21–23 January 2011[4]
Sprint   Kévin Sireau (FRA)   Sebastian Doehrer (GER)   Zhang Miao (CHN)
1 km time trial   François Pervis (FRA)   Hugo Haak (NED)   Simon Van Velthooven (NZL)
Team pursuit   Russia
Alexander Khatuntsev
Evgeny Kovalev
Alexei Markov
Alexander Serov
caught opponents
  Spain
Sergi Escobar
Asier Maeztu
Antonio Miguel Parra
Albert Torres
caught
  Great Britain
Mark Christian
Andrew Fenn
Erick Rowsell
Simon Yates
4:05.010
Team sprint   France
Michaël D'Almeida
François Pervis
Kévin Sireau
44.150
  Russia
Denis Dmitriev
Pavel Yakushevskiy
Sergey Kucherov
44.664
  China
Zhang Miao
Zhang Lei
Cheng Changsong
44.716
Keirin   Simon van Velthooven (NZL)   Scott Sunderland (AUS)   Asai Kota (JPN) (Cyclo Channel Tokyo)
Points race   Artur Ershov (RUS) (Lokomotiv)
35 pts
  Alexei Markov (RUS)
30 pts
  Claudio Imhof (SUI)
23 pts
Omnium   Sam Harrison (GBR)
28 pts
  Zachary Bell (CAN)
30 pts
  Roger Kluge (GER)
32 pts
  United Kingdom, Manchester — 18–20 February 2011[1]
Sprint   Kévin Sireau (FRA)   Jason Kenny (GBR) (Sky Track Cycling)   Chris Hoy (GBR) (Sky Track Cycling)
Individual pursuit   Rohan Dennis (AUS)
4:15.614
  Geraint Thomas (GBR)
4:16.477
  Marc Ryan (NZL)
4:24.855
Team pursuit   Great Britain
Steven Burke
Ed Clancy
Geraint Thomas
Bradley Wiggins
3:55.438
  New Zealand
Aaron Gate
Westley Gough
Peter Latham
Marc Ryan
4:00.314
  Spain
Pablo Bernal
Asier Maeztu
David Muntaner
Eloy Teruel
4:03.308
Team sprint   France
Grégory Baugé
Kévin Sireau
Michaël D'Almeida
43.534
  Germany
René Enders
Maximilian Levy
Stefan Nimke
43.715
  Great Britain (Sky Track Cycling)
Jason Kenny
Chris Hoy
Matthew Crampton
44.087
Keirin   Chris Hoy (GBR) (Sky Track Cycling)   Jason Niblett (AUS) (Team Jayco–AIS)   Azizulhasni Awang (MYS) (YSD Track Team)
Omnium   Shane Archbold (NZL)
15 pts
  Cho Ho-sung (KOR)
31 pts
  Elia Viviani (ITA)
36 pts

Women edit

Event Winner Second Third
  Australia, Melbourne — 2–4 December 2010[2]
Sprint   Anna Meares (AUS)   Victoria Pendleton (GBR)   Kristina Vogel (GER)
500m time trial   Anna Meares (AUS)
33.593
  Sandie Clair (FRA)
33.667
  Lee Wai Sze (CHN)
33.939
Team pursuit
details
  Australia
Katherine Bates
Sarah Kent
Josephine Tomic
3:22.171
  Germany
Charlotte Becker
Lisa Brennauer
Madeleine Sandig
3:23.166
  New Zealand
Kaytee Boyd
Lauren Ellis
Jaime Nielsen
3:23.477
Team sprint   China
Gong Jinjie
Guo Shuang
33.240
  Great Britain
Victoria Pendleton
Jess Varnish
33.562
  France
Sandie Clair
Clara Sanchez
33.655
Keirin   Anna Meares (AUS)   Karlee McCulloch (AUS) (Team Jayco–AIS)   Clara Sanchez (FRA)
Omnium   Leire Olaberria (ESP)
26 pts
  Tara Whitten (CAN)
31 pts
  Małgorzata Wojtyra (POL)
40 pts
  Colombia, Cali — 16–18 December 2010[3]
Sprint   Kristina Vogel (GER)   Victoria Pendleton (GBR)   Sandie Clair (FRA)
Individual pursuit   Alison Shanks (NZL)
3:30.258
  Wendy Houvenaghel (GBR)
3:34.794
  Pascale Schnider (SUI)
3:38.403
Team pursuit   New Zealand
Rushlee Buchanan
Lauren Ellis
Alison Shanks
3:22.202
  United States (OUCH Pro Cycling)
Dotsie Bausch
Sarah Hammer
Lauren Tamayo
3:25.222
  Great Britain
Katie Colclough
Wendy Houvenaghel
Laura Trott
3:23.789
Team sprint   Great Britain
Victoria Pendleton
Jess Varnish
33.322
  Germany
Kristina Vogel
Miriam Welte
33.625
  France
Sandie Clair
Virginie Cueff
33.756
Keirin   Victoria Pendleton (GBR)   Sandie Clair (FRA)   Virginie Cueff (FRA)
Points race   Giorgia Bronzini (ITA)
13 pts
  Kelly Druyts (BEL)
10 pts
  Aksana Papko (BLR)
10 pts
Omnium   Sarah Hammer (USA) (OUCH Pro Cycling)
15 pts
  Tara Whitten (CAN)
30 pts
  Tatsiana Sharakova (BLR)
31 pts
  China, Beijing — 21–23 January 2011[4]
Sprint   Lyubov Shulika (UKR)   Simona Krupeckaitė (LTU)   Junhong Lin (CHN)
Team pursuit   New Zealand
Kaytee Boyd
Rushlee Buchanan
Jaime Nielsen
3:25.062
  Canada
Tara Whitten
Laura Brown
Stephanie Roorda
3:27.238
  Australia
Melissa Hoskins
Ashlee Ankudinoff
Sarah Kent
3:26.515
Team sprint   China
Junhong Lin
Gong Jinjie
33.295
  Netherlands
Willy Kanis
Yvonne Hijgenaar
33.996
  Lithuania
Simona Krupeckaitė
Gintarė Gaivenytė
34.296
Keirin   Clara Sanchez (FRA)   Lyubov Shulika (UKR)   Becky James (GBR)
Omnium   Tara Whitten (CAN)
24 pts
  Kirsten Wild (NED)
37 pts
  Pascale Jeuland (FRA)
38 pts
  United Kingdom, Manchester — 18–20 February 2011[1]
Sprint   Anna Meares (AUS)   Guo Shuang (CHN)   Victoria Pendleton (GBR)
Team Pursuit
details
  Great Britain
Wendy Houvenaghel
Joanna Rowsell
Sarah Storey
3:19.757
  New Zealand
Lauren Ellis
Jaime Nielsen
Alison Shanks
3:20.828
  United States (OUCH Pro Cycling)
Sarah Hammer
Dotsie Bausch
Jennie Reed
3:23.136
Team sprint   Australia
Anna Meares
Kaarle McCulloch
33.017
  China
Gong Jinjie
Guo Shuang
33.173
  France
Sandie Clair
Clara Sanchez
33.347
Keirin   Guo Shuang (CHN)   Clara Sanchez (FRA)   Victoria Pendleton (GBR)
Scratch race
details
  Anastasia Chulkova (RUS)   Jennie Reed (USA) (OUCH Pro Cycling)   Amy Cure (AUS)
Omnium   Sarah Hammer (USA) (OUCH Pro Cycling)
9 pts
  Kirsten Wild (NED)
38 pts
  Małgorzata Wojtyra (POL)
42 pts

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Manchester UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics – Complete Results Book" (pdf). Tissot Timing. 18–20 February 2011. Retrieved 18 October 2012.
  2. ^ a b "Melbourne UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics – Complete Results Book" (pdf). Tissot Timing. 2–4 December 2010. Retrieved 18 October 2012.
  3. ^ a b "Cali UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics – Complete Results Book" (pdf). Tissot Timing. 16–18 December 2010. Retrieved 18 October 2012.
  4. ^ a b "Beijing UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics – Complete Results Book" (pdf). Tissot Timing. 21–23 January 2011. Retrieved 18 October 2012.

External links edit