2009 UCI Road World Championships – Men's time trial

The Men's time trial of the 2009 UCI Road World Championships cycling event took place on 24 September in Mendrisio, Switzerland.

Men's Individual Time Trial
2009 UCI Road World Championships
Rainbow jersey
Race details
Dates2009-09-24 in Switzerland Mendrisio (SUI)
Stages1
Distance49.8 km (30.94 mi)
Winning time00h 57' 55.74"
Results
  Winner  Fabian Cancellara (SUI) (Switzerland)
  Second  Gustav Larsson (SWE) (Sweden)
  Third  Tony Martin (GER) (Germany)
← 2008
2010 →

Starting order edit

Group 1 Group 2 Group 3 Group 4 Group 5
66   Saint Kitts and Nevis James Weekes 66 53   Saint Kitts and Nevis Reginald Douglas 65 40   Namibia Erik Hoffmann 43 27   Latvia Raivis Belohvoščiks 45 14   United States Tom Danielson 23
65   Finland Jarmo Rissanen 61 52   Kyrgyzstan Eugen Wacker 29 39   Finland Matti Helminen 57 26   Ukraine Dmytro Hrabovs'kyj 58 13   Russia Michail Ignat'ev 57
64   Hungary Rida Cador 55 51   Ecuador José Ragonessi 60 38   Australia Adam Hansen 30 25   Germany Sebastian Lang 20 12   Netherlands Lars Boom 16
63   Colombia José Serpa 22 50   South Africa Jay Robert Thomson 28 37   France Jérôme Coppel 56 24   Slovakia Martin Velits 34 11   Kazakhstan Aleksandr Vinokurov 8
62   Belarus Branislaŭ Samojlaŭ 37 49   Slovenia Gregor Gazvoda 48 36   Argentina Martín Garrido 32 23   Belgium Dominique Cornu 14 10   Slovenia Janez Brajkovič 6
61   Australia Cameron Wurf 53 48   Slovakia Pavol Polievka 52 35   Great Britain Chris Froome 18 22   Ukraine Andrij Hrivko 41 9   Norway Edvald Boasson Hagen 27
60   Romania Gabriel Pop 64 47   Romania Eduard Novak 63 34   Sweden Fredrik Ericsson 39 21   Russia Artem Ovechkin 17 8   Czech Republic František Raboň 19
59   France Jean-Christophe Péraud 12 46   Brazil Magno Nazaret 46 33   Denmark Lars Bak 13 20   Lithuania Ignatas Konovalovas 45 7   Canada Svein Tuft 15
58   Portugal Sérgio Paulinho 26 45   Ireland David McCann 45 32   New Zealand Jeremy Vennell 50 19   Portugal Tiago Machado 54 6   Belgium Sébastien Rosseler 38
57   Argentina Matías Médici 44 44   United States Tom Zirbel 4 31   Spain Juan José Cobo 42 18   Denmark Alex Rasmussen 24 5   Germany Tony Martin 3
56   Hungary Zoltán Madaras 62 43   Estonia Ervin Korts-Laur 52 30   Netherlands Koos Moerenhout 7 17   Belarus Vasil Kiryienka 49 4   Great Britain Bradley Wiggins 21
55   Poland Bartosz Huzarski 33 42   Colombia Juan Carlos López Marín 36 29   Poland Maciej Bodnar 59 17   Italy Marco Pinotti 5 3   Sweden Gustav Larsson 2
54   Spain José Iván Gutiérrez 35 41    Switzerland Rubens Bertogliati 40 28   Kazakhstan Andrej Kašečkin 25 15   Latvia Aleksejs Saramotins 31 2    Switzerland Fabian Cancellara 1
1   Germany Bert Grabsch 10

Final classification (top 30) edit

Rank Cyclist Time
1   Fabian Cancellara (SUI)[1] 57'55:74"
2   Gustav Larsson (SWE) +01'27.13"
3   Tony Martin (GER) +02'30.18"
4   Marco Pinotti (ITA) +03'02.88"
5   Janez Brajkovič (SLO) +03'08.49"
6   Koos Moerenhout (NED) +03'11.59"
7   Alexander Vinokourov (KAZ) +03'20.95"
8   Ignatas Konovalovas (LIT) +03'33.88"
9   Bert Grabsch (GER) +03'37.39"
10   David McCann (IRL) +03.40:61
11   Jean-Christophe Péraud (FRA) +03'37:39"
12   Lars Bak (DEN) +04'07:66"
13   Dominique Cornu (BEL) +04'09.40"
14   Svein Tuft (CAN) +04'24.25"⁹
15   Lars Boom (NED) +04'24.85"
16   Artem Ovechkin (RUS) +04'27.64"
17   Chris Froome (GBR)[2] +04'34.55"
18   František Raboň (CZE) +04'39.67"
19   Sebastian Lang (GER) +04'40.97"
20   Bradley Wiggins (GBR) +04'50.39"
21   José Serpa (COL) +04'56.25"
22   Tom Danielson (USA) +05'09.45"
23   Alex Rasmussen (DEN) +05'12.60"
24   Andrey Kashechkin (KAZ) +05'16.82"
25   Sérgio Paulinho (POR) +05'25.86"
26   Edvald Boasson Hagen (NOR) +05'28.44"
27   Jay Robert Thomson (RSA) +05'28.71"
28   Eugen Wacker (KGZ) +05'31.07"
29   Adam Hansen (AUS) +05'33.54"
30   Aleksejs Saramotins (LAT) +05'34.76"

References edit

  1. ^ Fotheringham, William (24 September 2009). "Bradley Wiggins curses his luck as Fabian Cancellara triumphs in world time-trial". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 November 2022.
  2. ^ Hickmott, Larry (24 September 2009). "Day 2 – World Road Champs". British Cycling.