2023 UCI Track Cycling World Championships – Men's individual pursuit
| Men's individual pursuit at the 2023 UCI Track Cycling World Championships | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Venue | Sir Chris Hoy Velodrome | |||||||||
| Location | Glasgow, United Kingdom | |||||||||
| Dates | 6 August | |||||||||
| Competitors | 27 from 17 nations | |||||||||
| Winning time | 4:01.976 | |||||||||
| Medalists | ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
| 2023 UCI Track Cycling World Championships | ||
|---|---|---|
| Sprint | men | women |
| Time trial | men | women |
| Individual pursuit | women | |
| Team pursuit | men | women |
| Team sprint | men | women |
| Keirin | men | women |
| Scratch | men | women |
| Points race | men | women |
| Madison | men | women |
| Elimination | men | women |
| Omnium | men | women |
The Men's individual pursuit competition at the 2023 UCI Track Cycling World Championships was held on 6 August 2023.[1][2][3]
Results
Qualifying
The qualifying was started at 10:22.[4] The two fastest riders raced for gold, the third and fourth fastest riders raced for bronze.
| Rank | Name | Nation | Time | Behind | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Filippo Ganna | 4:01.344 | Q | ||
| 2 | Daniel Bigham | 4:02.961 | +1.617 | Q | |
| 3 | Jonathan Milan | 4:06.393 | +5.049 | q | |
| 4 | Ivo Oliveira | 4:06.407 | +5.063 | q | |
| 5 | Tobias Buck-Gramcko | 4:07.626 | +6.282 | ||
| 6 | Conor Leahy | 4:08.593 | +7.249 | ||
| 7 | Oliver Bleddyn | 4:09.606 | +8.262 | ||
| 8 | Felix Groß | 4:09.800 | +8.456 | ||
| 9 | Chris Ernst | 4:10.281 | +8.937 | ||
| 10 | Manlio Moro | 4:10.460 | +9.116 | ||
| 11 | Thomas Sexton | 4:11.793 | +10.449 | ||
| 12 | Corentin Ermenault | 4:12.341 | +10.997 | ||
| 13 | Claudio Imhof | 4:13.157 | +11.813 | ||
| 14 | Kacper Majewski | 4:13.544 | +12.200 | ||
| 15 | Kazushige Kuboki | 4:13.708 | +12.364 | ||
| 16 | Niccolò Galli | 4:14.830 | +13.486 | ||
| 17 | Michael Foley | 4:15.609 | +14.265 | ||
| 18 | Carson Mattern | 4:17.896 | +16.552 | ||
| 19 | Zhang Haiao | 4:17.897 | +16.553 | ||
| 20 | Juan Esteban Arango | 4:21.752 | +20.408 | ||
| 21 | Joan Bennassar | 4:21.951 | +20.607 | ||
| 22 | Shoi Matsuda | 4:21.963 | +20.619 | ||
| 23 | Ramis Dinmukhametov | 4:28.720 | +27.376 | ||
| 24 | Vitālijs Korņilovs | 4:31.444 | +30.100 | ||
| 25 | Lotfi Tchambaz | 4:34.561 | +33.217 | ||
| 26 | Qiu Zhentao | 4:36.644 | +35.300 | ||
| 27 | Valère Thiébaud | 4:46.943 | +45.599 |
Finals
The finals were started at 19:01.[5]
| Rank | Name | Nation | Time | Behind |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gold medal race | ||||
| Filippo Ganna | 4:01.976 | |||
| Daniel Bigham | 4:02.030 | +0.054 | ||
| Bronze medal race | ||||
| Jonathan Milan | 4:05.868 | |||
| 4 | Ivo Oliveira | 4:08.469 | +2.601 | |
References
- ^ "Dates of 2023 UCI Cycling Worlds announced". British Cycling. Retrieved 20 April 2022.
- ^ "Schedule" (PDF). downloads.ctfassets.net. p. 64. Retrieved 31 July 2023.
- ^ "Start list". Tissot Timing. 5 August 2023. Archived from the original on 14 March 2024. Retrieved 5 August 2023.
- ^ "Qualifying results". Tissot Timing. 6 August 2023. Archived from the original on 14 March 2024. Retrieved 6 August 2023.
- ^ "Final Classification". Tissot Timing. 6 August 2023. Archived from the original on 14 March 2024. Retrieved 7 August 2023.