Cycling at the 1976 Summer Olympics – Men's individual road race

The men's individual road race at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, was held on 26 July 1976. There were 134 cyclists from 40 nations starting the race.[1] The maximum number of cyclists per nation was four. Fifty-eight cyclists finished the race.[2] The event was won by Bernt Johansson of Sweden, the nation's first victory in the men's individual road race. Giuseppe Martinelli put Italy back on the podium with his silver; the nation had won gold or silver every Games from 1956 to 1968 but did not medal in 1972. Mieczysław Nowicki's bronze was Poland's first medal in the event.

Men's cycling road race
at the Games of the XXI Olympiad
Bernt Johansson
VenueMontréal, Canada
Date26 July 1976
Competitors134 from 40 nations
Winning time4:46:52
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Bernt Johansson
 Sweden
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Giuseppe Martinelli
 Italy
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Mieczysław Nowicki
 Poland
← 1972
1980 →

Background edit

This was the 10th 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 (and which would be reintroduced alongside the road race in 1996). Ryszard Szurkowski of Poland was "probably" the favorite; he had won the 1973 world championship and placed second in 1974. Neither the 1974 nor 1975 world champions competed in Montreal. [1]

Bolivia and Nicaragua each made their debut in the men's individual road race. Great Britain made its 10th appearance in the event, the only nation to have competed in each appearance to date.

Competition format and course edit

The mass-start race was on a 177.49 kilometre course "over the hilly Mont-Royal Circuit".[1][3]

Schedule edit

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4)

Date Time Round
Monday, 26 July 1976 10:00 Final

Results edit

The lead pack of 10 riders got clear during lap 6. Johansson broke away from the pack in the last lap for a clear win. In the final sprint by the remaining nine leaders, Thaler finished in front but was penalized for interfering with the other riders and demoted from second place to ninth (the back of the + 31" group, with Alfonsel falling behind the rest into 10th place).[1]

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
  Bernt Johansson   Sweden 4:46:52.0
  Giuseppe Martinelli   Italy 4:47:23.0
  Mieczysław Nowicki   Poland s.t.
4 Alfons De Wolf   Belgium s.t.
5 Nikolay Gorelov   Soviet Union s.t.
6 George Mount   United States s.t.
7 Jean-René Bernaudeau   France s.t.
8 Vittorio Algeri   Italy s.t.
9 Klaus-Peter Thaler   West Germany s.t.
10 Bernardo Alfonsel   Spain 4:47:27.0
11 Stanisław Szozda   Poland 4:49:01.0
12 Ryszard Szurkowski   Poland s.t.
13 Vlastimil Moravec   Czechoslovakia s.t.
14 Carlos Cardet   Cuba s.t.
15 Garry Bell   New Zealand s.t.
16 Karl-Dietrich Diers   East Germany s.t.
17 Aleksandr Averin   Soviet Union s.t.
18 Herbert Spindler   Austria s.t.
19 Wilfried Trott   West Germany s.t.
20 Harry Hannus   Finland s.t.
21 Roman Humenberger   Austria s.t.
22 Álvaro Pachón   Colombia s.t.
23 Luis Manrique   Colombia s.t.
24 Pierre Harvey   Canada s.t.
25 Arie Hassink   Netherlands s.t.
26 Roberto Ceruti   Italy s.t.
27 Wolfgang Steinmayr   Austria s.t.
28 Clyde Sefton   Australia s.t.
29 Sven-Åke Nilsson   Sweden s.t.
30 Jan Brzeźny   Poland s.t.
31 Carmelo Barone   Italy s.t.
32 Rafael Ladrón   Spain s.t.
33 Juan José Moral   Spain s.t.
34 Remo Sansonetti   Australia s.t.
35 Joseph Waugh   Great Britain s.t.
36 Frank Hoste   Belgium s.t.
37 Hans-Peter Jakst   West Germany s.t.
38 Thorleif Andresen   Norway s.t.
39 Valery Chaplygin   Soviet Union s.t.
40 Leo van Vliet   Netherlands s.t.
41 Petr Bucháček   Czechoslovakia 4:54:26.0
42 John Howard   United States s.t.
43 Dudley Hayton   Great Britain s.t.
44 Aavo Pikkuus   Soviet Union 4:54:49.0
45 Rubén Camacho   Mexico s.t.
46 Peter Weibel   West Germany s.t.
47 Dirk Heirweg   Belgium 4:55:41.0
48 Eddy Schepers   Belgium s.t.
49 Stoyan Bobekov   Bulgaria 4:58:35.0
50 Ad Tak   Netherlands 5:00:19.0
51 Rudolf Mitteregger   Austria s.t.
52 Vern Hanaray   New Zealand s.t.
53 Ramón Noriega   Venezuela 5:03:13.0
54 Gilles Durand   Canada s.t.
55 Geir Digerud   Norway 5:04:42.0
56 David Boll   United States 5:05:00.0
57 Richard Trinkler   Switzerland s.t.
58 José Ollarves   Venezuela 5:07:09.0
Juan Carlos Haedo   Argentina DNF
Osvaldo Benvenuti   Argentina DNF
Oswaldo Frossasco   Argentina DNF
Raúl Labbate   Argentina DNF
Alan Goodrope   Australia DNF
Peter Kesting   Australia DNF
Marco Soria   Bolivia DNF
Ivan Popov   Bulgaria DNF
Martin Martinov   Bulgaria DNF
Nedyalko Stoyanov   Bulgaria DNF
Tom Morris   Canada DNF
Brian Chewter   Canada DNF
Miguel Samacá   Colombia DNF
Abelardo Ríos   Colombia DNF
Carlos Alvarado Reyes   Costa Rica DNF
Roberto Menéndez   Cuba DNF
Gregorio Aldo Arencibia   Cuba DNF
Jorge Pérez   Cuba DNF
Petr Matoušek   Czechoslovakia DNF
Vladimír Vondráček   Czechoslovakia DNF
Verner Blaudzun   Denmark DNF
Jørgen Emil Hansen   Denmark DNF
Bent Pedersen   Denmark DNF
Willy Skibby   Denmark DNF
Gerhard Lauke   East Germany DNF
Hans-Joachim Hartnick   East Germany DNF
Siegbert Schmeisser   East Germany DNF
René Bittinger   France DNF
Francis Duteil   France DNF
Christian Jourdan   France DNF
Philip Griffiths   Great Britain DNF
William Nickson   Great Britain DNF
Mikhail Kountras   Greece DNF
Kwong Chi Yan   Hong Kong DNF
Chan Fai Lui   Hong Kong DNF
Tang Kam Man   Hong Kong DNF
Chan Lam Hams   Hong Kong DNF
Mohamed Ali Acha-Cheloi   Iran DNF
Hassan Arianfard   Iran DNF
Asghar Khodayari   Iran DNF
Mahmoud Delshad   Iran DNF
Alan McCormack   Ireland DNF
Oliver McQuaid   Ireland DNF
Errol Walters   Jamaica DNF
Lucien Didier   Luxembourg DNF
Marcel Thull   Luxembourg DNF
Yahya Ahmad   Malaysia DNF
Luis Rosendo Ramos   Mexico DNF
José Castañeda   Mexico DNF
Rodolfo Vitela   Mexico DNF
Miguel Espinoza   Nicaragua DNF
David Iornos   Nicaragua DNF
Hamblin González   Nicaragua DNF
Manuel Largaespada   Nicaragua DNF
Frits Schür   Netherlands DNF
Jamie Richards   New Zealand DNF
Pål Henning Hansen   Norway DNF
Stein Bråthen   Norway DNF
Daniele Cesaretti   San Marino DNF
Paulino Martínez   Spain DNF
Leif Hansson   Sweden DNF
Alf Segersäll   Sweden DNF
Hansjörg Aemisegger   Switzerland DNF
Robert Thalmann   Switzerland DNF
Serge Demierre   Switzerland DNF
Panya Singprayool-Dinmuong   Thailand DNF
Chartchai Juntrat   Thailand DNF
Prajin Rungrote   Thailand DNF
Arlee Wararong   Thailand DNF
Michael Neel   United States DNF
Carlos Alcantara   Uruguay DNF
Víctor González   Uruguay DNF
Waldemar Pedrazzi   Uruguay DNF
Washington Díaz   Uruguay DNF
Justo Galaviz   Venezuela DNF
Nicolas Reidtler   Venezuela DNF

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Road Race, Individual, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  2. ^ "Cycling at the 1976 Montréal Summer Games: Men's Road Race, Individual". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 12 April 2015.
  3. ^ Official Report, vol. 3, p. 199.

External links edit