Cycling at the 1984 Summer Olympics – Men's points race

The men's points race was an event at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California, for which the final was held on August 3, 1984. There were 43 participants from 25 nations (with 6 other cyclists not starting). Each nation was limited to 2 cyclists. 24 cyclists competed in the final after two semifinals (twelve best in each qualified). The event was won by Roger Ilegems of Belgium, with Uwe Messerschmidt taking silver and José Youshimatz of Mexico bronze. It was the first medal in the event for each nation, none of which had competed in the previous edition in 1900 (though a united Germany had competed and taken a medal).

Men's points race
at the Games of the XXIII Olympiad
Roger Ilegems wearing his gold medal
VenueOlympic Velodrome, Los Angeles
Dates31 July to 3 August
Competitors43 from 25 nations
Winning score37 (0 laps behind)
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Roger Ilegems
 Belgium
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Uwe Messerschmidt
 West Germany
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) José Youshimatz
 Mexico
← 1900
1988 →

Background edit

This was the second appearance of the event. It was first held in 1900 and not again until 1984; after that, it was held every Summer Games until 2008 when it was removed from the programme. The women's version was held from 1996 through 2008.[1]

The reigning World Champion (1983) was Michael Markussen of Denmark. The other two men from the world championship podium, Hans-Joachim Pohl of East Germany and Ivan Romanov of the Soviet Union, were not able to compete due to the Soviet-led boycott.[1]

23 nations made their debut in the event. France and Italy competed for the second time, the only nations to have competed in 1900 as well as 1984.

Competition format edit

The contest consisted of two rounds: semifinals and a final. The distance varied by round, with 30 kilometres in the semifinals and 50 kilometres in the final. The top 12 in each of the two semifinals advanced to the 24-man final. Placement in each race was determined first by how many laps behind the leader the cyclist was and second by how many sprint points the cyclist accumulated. That is, a cyclist with more sprint points but who was lapped once would be ranked behind a cyclist with fewer points but who had not been lapped. Sprint points could be gained only by cyclists who had not been lapped.

In the semifinals, there were 20 sprints—one every 1.5 kilometres. Points were awarded based on the position of the cyclists at the end of the sprint. Most of the sprints were worth 5 points for the leader, 3 to the second-place cyclist, 2 to third, and 1 to fourth. The 10th (halfway) and 20th (final) sprint were worth double: 10 points, 6, 4, and 2.

The final featured 30 sprints—one every 1.67 kilometres. As in the semifinals, most sprints were worth 5/3/2/1 points, with the halfway (15th) and final (30th) sprints worth 10/6/4/2.[1]

Schedule edit

All times are Pacific Daylight Time (UTC-7)

Date Time Round
Tuesday, 31 July 1984 15:30 Semifinal 1
Wednesday, 1 August 1984 13:25 Semifinal 2
Friday, 3 August 1984 14:30 Final

Results edit

Semifinals edit

Semifinal 1 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Laps behind Points Notes
1 Brian Holm   Denmark 0 37 Q
2 Brian Fowler   New Zealand 0 24 Q
3 Juan Curuchet   Argentina 1 35 Q
4 Silvio Martinello   Italy 1 13 Q
5 William Palacio   Colombia 1 11 Q
6 Gary Trevisiol   Canada 1 10 Q
7 Roger Ilegems   Belgium 1 9 Q
8 Glenn Clarke   Australia 2 20 Q
9 Paul Curran   Great Britain 2 13 Q
10 Uwe Messerschmidt   West Germany 2 10 Q
11 Éric Louvel   France 2 9 Q
12 Stephan Joho   Switzerland 2 8 Q
13 Kurt Zellhofer   Austria 2 6
14 Hans Fischer   Brazil 2 5
15 Hitoshi Sato   Japan 2 2
Danny Van Haute   United States 2 2
17 Peter Aldridge   Jamaica 2 1
18 Deogracias Asuncion   Philippines 2 0
Roberto Muñoz   Chile 2 0

Semifinal 2 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Laps behind Points Notes
1 Jörg Müller   Switzerland 0 14 Q
2 José Youshimatz   Mexico 0 8 Q
3 Didier Garcia   France 0 6 Q
4 Balbino Jaramillo   Colombia 0 4 Q
5 Michael Markussen   Denmark 1 26 Q
6 Alex Stieda   Canada 1 23 Q
7 Juan Carlos Haedo   Argentina 1 19 Q
8 Shaun Wallace   Great Britain 1 18 Q
9 Rudi Ceyssens   Belgium 1 17 Q
10 Manfred Donike   West Germany 1 16 Q
11 Derk van Egmond   Netherlands 1 15 Q
12 Stefano Allocchio   Italy 1 12 Q
13 Graeme Miller   New Zealand 1 10
14 Mark Whitehead   United States 1 9
15 Akio Kuwazawa   Japan 1 8
16 Miguel Droguett   Chile 1 4
Carlos García   Uruguay 1 4
18 Gary West   Australia 1 3
19 Edgardo Pagarigan   Philippines 1 1
Paul Popp   Austria 1 1
21 Aubrey Richmond   Guyana 2 0
Elisha Hughes   Antigua and Barbuda DNF
Ernest Moodie   Cayman Islands DNF
Ian Stanley   Jamaica DNF

Final edit

The final classification was as follows:[2]

Rank Cyclist Nation Laps behind Points
  Roger Ilegems   Belgium 0 37
  Uwe Messerschmidt   West Germany 0 16
  José Youshimatz   Mexico 1 29
4 Jörg Müller   Switzerland 1 23
5 Juan Curuchet   Argentina 1 20
6 Glenn Clarke   Australia 1 13
7 Brian Fowler   New Zealand 1 12
8 Derk van Egmond   Netherlands 2 56
9 Michael Markussen   Denmark 2 21
10 Alex Stieda   Canada 2 17
11 Rudi Ceyssens   Belgium 2 16
12 Didier Garcia   France 2 13
13 Balbino Jaramillo   Colombia 2 12
14 Stefano Allocchio   Italy 2 11
15 William Palacio   Colombia 2 9
16 Silvio Martinello   Italy 2 8
17 Brian Holm   Denmark 3 12
18 Gary Trevisiol   Canada 3 10
19 Manfred Donike   West Germany 3 3
20 Juan Carlos Haedo   Argentina 3 1
21 Shaun Wallace   Great Britain 3 1
22 Paul Curran   Great Britain 4 13
Éric Louvel   France DNF
Stephan Joho   Switzerland DNF

Results summary edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Semifinals Final
Laps behind Points Laps behind Points
  Roger Ilegems   Belgium 1 9 0 37
  Uwe Messerschmidt   West Germany 2 10 0 16
  José Youshimatz   Mexico 0 8 1 29
4 Jörg Müller   Switzerland 0 14 1 23
5 Juan Curuchet   Argentina 1 35 1 20
6 Glenn Clarke   Australia 2 20 1 13
7 Brian Fowler   New Zealand 0 24 1 12
8 Derk van Egmond   Netherlands 1 15 2 56
9 Michael Markussen   Denmark 1 26 2 21
10 Alex Stieda   Canada 1 23 2 17
11 Rudi Ceyssens   Belgium 1 17 2 16
12 Didier Garcia   France 0 6 2 13
13 Balbino Jaramillo   Colombia 0 4 2 12
14 Stefano Allocchio   Italy 1 12 2 11
15 William Palacio   Colombia 1 11 2 9
16 Silvio Martinello   Italy 1 13 2 8
17 Brian Holm   Denmark 0 37 3 12
18 Gary Trevisiol   Canada 1 10 3 10
19 Manfred Donike   West Germany 1 16 3 3
20 Juan Carlos Haedo   Argentina 1 19 3 1
21 Shaun Wallace   Great Britain 1 18 3 1
22 Paul Curran   Great Britain 2 13 4 13
23 Éric Louvel   France 2 9 DNF
Stephan Joho   Switzerland 2 8 DNF
25 Graeme Miller   New Zealand 1 10 Did not advance
26 Mark Whitehead   United States 1 9 Did not advance
27 Akio Kuwazawa   Japan 1 8 Did not advance
28 Miguel Droguett   Chile 1 4 Did not advance
Carlos García   Uruguay 1 4 Did not advance
30 Gary West   Australia 1 3 Did not advance
31 Edgardo Pagarigan   Philippines 1 1 Did not advance
Paul Popp   Austria 1 1 Did not advance
33 Kurt Zellhofer   Austria 2 6 Did not advance
34 Hans Fischer   Brazil 2 5 Did not advance
35 Hitoshi Sato   Japan 2 2 Did not advance
Danny Van Haute   United States 2 2 Did not advance
37 Peter Aldridge   Jamaica 2 1 Did not advance
38 Deogracias Asuncion   Philippines 2 0 Did not advance
Roberto Muñoz   Chile 2 0 Did not advance
40 Aubrey Richmond   Guyana 2 0 Did not advance
Elisha Hughes   Antigua and Barbuda DNF Did not advance
Ernest Moodie   Cayman Islands DNF Did not advance
Ian Stanley   Jamaica DNF Did not advance
Lee Fu-hsiang   Chinese Taipei DNS Did not advance
Kari Myyryläinen   Finland DNS Did not advance
Salvador Rios   Mexico DNS Did not advance
Gene Samuel   Trinidad and Tobago DNS Did not advance
Randolph Toussaint   Guyana DNS Did not advance
Clyde Wilson   Bermuda DNS Did not advance

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Points Race, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  2. ^ "Cycling at the 1984 Los Angeles Summer Games: Men's Points Race Final Round". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020.

External links edit