Cycling at the 1908 Summer Olympics – Men's 100 kilometres
The men's 100 kilometres was one of seven track cycling events on the Cycling at the 1908 Summer Olympics programme. Its distance was the longest of the individual event distances. A challenge cup was presented by the Prince of Wales to the winner. There were 43 competitors from 11 nations.[1] Each nation could enter up to 12 cyclists.[2] The event was won by Charles Henry Bartlett of Great Britain, with his countryman Charles Denny finishing second. Octave Lapize earned bronze, making France the only nation to have medalists at both appearances of the 100 kilometres race (Léon Flameng won in 1896).
Men's 100 kilometres at the Games of the IV Olympiad | ||||||||||
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The final lap | ||||||||||
Venue | White City Stadium | |||||||||
Dates | July 15–18 | |||||||||
Competitors | 43 from 11 nations | |||||||||
Winning time | 2:41:48.6 | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
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Cycling at the 1908 Summer Olympics | |
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Track cycling | |
660 yards | men |
5000 metres | men |
20 kilometres | men |
100 kilometres | men |
Sprint | men |
Tandem | men |
Team pursuit | men |
Background
From 1896 to 1924 (excluding 1912, when no track events were held), the track cycling programme included events at a variety of distances that changed from Games to Games and ranged from the 1⁄4-mile to the 100 kilometres (and, even longer, the unique 12 hours race in 1896 that saw finishers exceed 300 kilometres). The 100 kilometres was held twice: in 1896 and again in 1908. The favorite in 1908 was Leon Meredith of Great Britain, who had won the world championship in 1904, 1905, and 1907 (and would win again in 1908, 1909, 1911, and 1913).[1]
France, Germany, Great Britain, and Greece made their second appearance in the event, having competed previously in 1896 (along with Austria). Belgium, Canada, Italy, the Netherlands, South Africa, Sweden, and the United States made their only appearance in 1908.
Competition format
The 100 kilometres race was conducted in two rounds, semifinals and a final. Each race was approximately 165.7 laps of the 660 yard track. The time limit for the race was 3 hours and 15 minutes. There were two semifinals. The first 6 cyclists to finish, and the 2 cyclists who led for the most laps, in each semifinal advanced to the final.
Schedule
Date | Time | Round |
---|---|---|
Wednesday, 15 July 1908 | 10:00 | Semifinal 1 |
Thursday, 16 July 1908 | 10:00 | Semifinal 2 |
Saturday, 18 July 1908 | 15:30 | Final |
Results
Semifinal 1
Lutz and Hansson broke away to a 300 yard lead at lap 76. Bailey caught them shortly after the halfway mark. The three lapped the field at lap 96. Santorinaios retired at lap 96, McCarthy at lap 103, and Katzer a few minutes later. Lutz tried to break away from the group, but Hansson and Bailey stayed with him. The finish was a sprint among the top three, with Hansson making an inside move with half a lap to go and winning by half a wheel over Lutz. Bailey was two lengths behind.[1][3]
Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Andrew Hansson | Sweden | 2:50:21.4 | Q |
2 | G. C. Lutz | France | Unknown | Q |
3 | Sydney Bailey | Great Britain | Unknown | Q |
4 | Pierre Texier | France | Unknown | Q |
5 | J. H. Bishop | Great Britain | Unknown | Q |
6 | D. C. Robertson | Great Britain | Unknown | Q |
7–14 | William Anderson | Canada | Unknown | |
Alwin Boldt | Germany | Unknown | ||
François Bonnet | France | Unknown | q | |
Georgius Damen | Netherlands | Unknown | ||
Gerard Bosch van Drakenstein | Netherlands | Unknown | ||
André Lepère | France | Unknown | ||
Harry Mussen | Great Britain | Unknown | q | |
J. Norman | Great Britain | Unknown | ||
— | Rudolf Katzer | Germany | DNF | |
Frederick McCarthy | Canada | DNF | ||
Ioannis Santorinaios | Greece | DNF |
Semifinal 2
Cunault and Madelaine were lapped at five miles, with Cunault retiring shortly after. Madelaine fell at lap 44 and needed an ambulance. Avrillon, leading for stretches, retired shortly after; along with the other non-finishers to that point, there were only 15 cyclists left of the 26 starters. A crash a little after the one-hour mark eliminated Noon and Weintz, with Meredith falling but able to resume the race. After an hour and a half, Coeckelberg crashed into an athletics judge who had wandered onto the track, hitting his head on the concrete curb and sustaining cuts on his thigh and head; he was able to continue, however. Zanzottera retired at lap 60 with cramps, and Parini retired shortly after. It started to rain two hours into the race, continuing for half an hour; only nine men remained at the end of it. Seven of them finished together, with Coeckelberg 100 yards behind at the end.[1][4]
It is not clear how Young advanced to the final; the Official Report says in the results of this heat that Coeckelberg and Denny qualified as having led the most laps, and in the description of the final field says that Young was "permitted to start, having satisfied the judges that he was not lapped in Heat 2."[4]
Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Leon Meredith | Great Britain | 2:43:15.4 | Q |
2 | Charles Henry Bartlett | Great Britain | Unknown | Q |
3 | Gustaf Westerberg | Sweden | Unknown | Q |
4 | Octave Lapize | France | Unknown | Q |
5 | Walter Andrews | Canada | Unknown | Q |
6 | William Pett | Great Britain | Unknown | Q |
7 | Charles Denny | Great Britain | Unknown | q |
8 | Guillaume Coeckelberg | Belgium | Unknown | q |
9 | Harry Young | Canada | Unknown | q |
— | Cesare Zanzottera | Italy | DNF | |
Charles Avrillon | France | DNF | ||
H. Cunault | France | DNF | ||
Bruno Götze | Germany | DNF | ||
Pierre Hostein | France | DNF | ||
Robert Jolly | Great Britain | DNF | ||
Jean Madelaine | France | DNF | ||
Guglielmo Malatesta | Italy | DNF | ||
Hermann Martens | Germany | DNF | ||
William Morton | Canada | DNF | ||
Dorus Nijland | Netherlands[5] | DNF | ||
David Noon | Great Britain | DNF | ||
Battista Parini | Italy | DNF | ||
T. H. E. Passmore | South Africa | DNF | ||
Paul Schulze | Germany | DNF | ||
Max Triebsch | Germany | DNF | ||
Louis Weintz | United States | DNF |
Final
It had rained before the start of the final and continued raining for most of the race. Meredith, Andrews, and Robertson crashed at 13 miles; they all continued but Meredith was behind the field and was lapped at lap 62, after which he retired. Bailey led at the halfway mark, but was lapped with 31 laps to go. The lead pack dwindled to seven riders at lap 115 and was down to four at the final lap. Three were British, allowing them to use teamwork to pace Bartlett for the final sprint. Denny led going into the final lap, with Lapize on the outside. Bartlett came down from the banking and sprinted to the finish, crossing the line a wheel ahead of Denny.[1][6]
Rank | Cyclist | Nation | Time |
---|---|---|---|
Charles Bartlett | Great Britain | 2:41:48.6 | |
Charles Denny | Great Britain | Unknown | |
Octave Lapize | France | Unknown | |
4 | William Pett | Great Britain | Unknown |
5 | Pierre Texier | France | Unknown |
6 | Walter Andrews | Canada | Unknown |
7 | D. C. Robertson | Great Britain | Unknown |
8 | Sydney Bailey | Great Britain | Unknown |
— | J. H. Bishop | Great Britain | DNF |
François Bonnet | France | DNF | |
Guillaume Coeckelberg | Belgium | DNF | |
Andrew Hansson | Sweden | DNF | |
G. C. Lutz | France | DNF | |
Leon Meredith | Great Britain | DNF | |
Harry Mussen | Great Britain | DNF | |
Gustaf Westerberg | Sweden | DNF | |
Harry Young | Canada | DNF |
Notes
- "100 kilometer, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 19 November 2020.
- Official Report, p. 33.
- Official Report, p. 120.
- Official Report, pp. 121–22.
- Nijland is listed as having competed for Germany in the Official Report section on the 100 kilometres; he was, however, Dutch and his nationality is correctly listed in all other places in the report.
- Official Report, pp. 122–24.