Cycling at the 1948 Summer Olympics – Men's individual road race

The men's individual road race at the 1948 Summer Olympics was held on an 11.45 km course. The course was circled seventeen times, so the total length of the competition was 194.6 km. There were 141 entries from 31 nations and 101 participants from 29 nations. Of the 101 starters, 28 rode the distance to the end.[1][2] The event was won by José Beyaert of France, the nation's second consecutive victory in the men's individual road race. The Netherlands and Belgium won their first medals in the event, with Gerrit Voorting's silver and Lode Wouters's bronze, respectively.

Men's cycling road race
at the Games of the XIV Olympiad
The peloton passes through the start and finish line
VenueOlympic Road Course, Windsor Great Park
194.633 km (120.9 mi)
Date13 August 1948
Competitors101 from 29 nations
Winning time5:18:12.6
Medalists
José Beyaert
 France
Gerrit Voorting
 Netherlands
Lode Wouters
 Belgium

Each nation could enter up to four cyclists. A team classification was made, based on the rankings of the three best cyclists per nation, and this was used to determine the results of the team road race.

Background

This was the third appearance of the event, previously held in 1896 and 1936; it would be held at every Summer Olympics after 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). There was no clear favorite, though Adolfo Ferrari of Italy was the reigning world champion. The race was initially intended to be held at Richmond Park in Surrey, but "a law was discovered that prohibited any activity there at more than 20 miles per hour."[3]

Argentina, Guyana, India, Mexico, Norway, Pakistan, South Korea, and Uruguay each made their debut in the men's individual road race. Great Britain made its third appearance in the event, the only nation to have competed in each appearance to date.

Competition format and course

The mass-start race was on a course that covered 17 laps of a 11.45 kilometres circuit around Windsor Great Park, for a total of 194.63 kilometres. The course was "relatively flat."[3] It "included no severe gradients, but was sufficiently undulating to provide a real test of stamina, and with bends . . . which needed all the skill of the contestants at the speed at which the race was run."[4] The surface was less than ideal, with "loose gravel roads" causing numerous punctures.[3]

Schedule

All times are British Summer Time (UTC+1)

Date Time Round
Friday, 13 August 194811:00Final

Results

Johansson broke away from the pack during the second lap, with Voorting and Faanhof catching him in lap 3. Johansson suffered a puncture during lap 9, falling back to the peloton. A chase group of nine cyclists caught up to Voorting and Faanhof on lap 12, but crashes and punctures dropped Faanhof, Rasmussen, and Rouffeteau out of the lead pack. Thomas was the first to attempt a breakaway, on lap 16, but was quickly caught by De Lathouwer and less-quickly caught by the rest of the pack in the last lap. Beyaert made two pushes on the last lap, being caught by the pack on the first but separating from the group on a short climb a half-mile away from the finish line; he held on to win the race. Voorting finished with a sprint for the silver medal.[3][4]

RankCyclistNationTime
José Beyaert France5:18:12.6
Gerrit Voorting Netherlands5:18:16.2
Lode Wouters Belgium5:18:16.2
4Leon De Lathouwer Belgium5:18:16.2
5Nils Johansson Sweden5:18:16.2
6Bob Maitland Great Britain5:18:16.2
7Jack Hoobin Australia5:18:18.2
8Gordon Thomas Great Britain5:18:18.2
9Adolfo Ferrari Italy5:21:45.0
10Silvio Pedroni Italy5:21:45.0
11Alain Moineau France5:21:45.0
12Eugène Van Roosbroeck Belgium5:21:45.0
13Jakob Schenk Switzerland5:21:45.0
14Rudi Valenta Austria5:24:48.0
15Jean Brun Switzerland5:26:54.0
16Ian Scott Great Britain5:26:57.2
17Jacques Dupont France5:12:45.3
18Harry Snell Sweden5:28:22.2
19Franco Fanti Italy5:29:35.2
20Livio Isotti Italy5:31:08.6
21Ceferino Peroné Argentina5:33:15.4
22Dante Benvenuti Argentina5:33:15.4
23Miguel Sevillano Argentina5:33:15.4
24Åke Olivestedt Sweden5:33:48.2
25Walter Reiser Switzerland5:34:25.2
26Russell Mockridge Australia5:39:54.6
27Kristian Pedersen Denmark5:39:57.2
28Knud Andersen Denmark5:39:57.2
Mario Mathieu ArgentinaDNF
Ken Caves AustraliaDNF
Jim Nestor AustraliaDNF
Hans Goldschmid AustriaDNF
Siegmund Huber AustriaDNF
Josef Pohnetal AustriaDNF
Liévin Lerno BelgiumDNF
Laddie Lewis GuyanaDNF
Lorne Atkinson CanadaDNF
Florent Jodoin CanadaDNF
Lance Pugh CanadaDNF
Laurent Tessier CanadaDNF
Rafael Iturrate ChileDNF
Mario Masanés ChileDNF
Exequiel Ramírez ChileDNF
Rogelio Salcedo ChileDNF
Børge Saxil Nielsen DenmarkDNF
Rudolf Rasmussen DenmarkDNF
Paul Backman FinlandDNF
Torvald Högström FinlandDNF
Erkki Koskinen FinlandDNF
René Rouffeteau FranceDNF
Ernie Clements Great BritainDNF
Manthos Kaloudis GreeceDNF
Evangelos Kouvelis GreeceDNF
Petros Leonidis GreeceDNF
Henk Faanhof NetherlandsDNF
Evert Grift NetherlandsDNF
Piet Peters NetherlandsDNF
Malcolm Havladar IndiaDNF
Raj Kumar Mehra IndiaDNF
Eruch Mistry IndiaDNF
Homi Powri IndiaDNF
Hwang San-ung South KoreaDNF
Gwon Ik-hyeon South KoreaDNF
Robert Bintz LuxembourgDNF
Marcel Ernzer LuxembourgDNF
Henri Kellen LuxembourgDNF
Pitty Scheer LuxembourgDNF
Placido Herrera MexicoDNF
Francisco Rodríguez MexicoDNF
Gabino Rodríguez MexicoDNF
Manuel Solis MexicoDNF
Nick Carter New ZealandDNF
Lorang Christiansen NorwayDNF
Leif Flengsrud NorwayDNF
Erling Kristiansen NorwayDNF
Aage Myhrvold NorwayDNF
Wazir Ali PakistanDNF
Hernán Llerena PeruDNF
Pedro Mathey PeruDNF
Luis Poggi PeruDNF
Dirkie Binneman South AfricaDNF
George Estman South AfricaDNF
Wally Rivers South AfricaDNF
Olle Wänlund SwedenDNF
Giovanni Rossi SwitzerlandDNF
Ali Çetiner TurkeyDNF
Mustafa Osmanlı TurkeyDNF
Orhan Suda TurkeyDNF
Talat Tunçalp TurkeyDNF
Frank Brilando United StatesDNF
Ed Lynch United StatesDNF
Chester Nelsen United StatesDNF
Wendell Rollins United StatesDNF
Waldemar Bernatzky UruguayDNF
Enrique Demarco UruguayDNF
Mario Figueredo UruguayDNF
Luis López UruguayDNF
Milan Poredski YugoslaviaDNF
August Prosenik YugoslaviaDNF
Aleksandar Strain YugoslaviaDNF
Aleksandar Zorić YugoslaviaDNF

References

  1. "Cycling at the 1948 London Summer Games: Men's Road Race, Individual". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 15 July 2014.
  2. "THE OFFICIAL REPORT OF THE ORGANISING COMMITTEE FOR THE XIV OLYMPIAD" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 27 February 2012.
  3. "Road Race, Individual, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  4. Official Report, p. 319.
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