Cycling at the 1952 Summer Olympics – Men's sprint

The men's sprint (or "scratch race") at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki, Finland was held from July 28 to July 31, 1952. There were 27 participants from 27 nations, with each nation limited to a single cyclist.[1] The event was won by Enzo Sacchi of Italy, the nation's second consecutive victory in the men's sprint. Lionel Cox's silver was Australia's first medal in the event. Werner Potzernheim of Germany took bronze.

Men's sprint
at the Games of the XV Olympiad
Lionel Cox
VenueHelsinki Velodrome
DatesJuly 28 31
Competitors27 from 27 nations
Medalists
Enzo Sacchi
 Italy
Lionel Cox
 Australia
Werner Potzernheim
 Germany

Background

This was the 10th appearance of the event, which has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1904 and 1912. None of the semifinalists from 1948 returned. The heavy favorite was Enzo Sacchi, the reigning world champion. The man who would have been his biggest competitor, Russell Mockridge of Australia, competed only in the track time trial and tandem.[2]

Finland, Guatemala, Jamaica, Japan, Romania, and the Soviet Union each made their debut in the men's sprint. France made its 10th appearance, the only nation to have competed at every appearance of the event.

Competition format

This track cycling event consisted of numerous rounds: four main rounds and three repechages. Each race involved the riders starting simultaneously and next to each other, from a standing start. Because the early part of races tend to be slow-paced and highly tactical, only the time for the last 200 metres of the one-kilometre race is typically recorded.

The trend in the Olympic sprint competition was toward expansion of a best-of-three match format (beginning in 1932 for the final, expanding in 1936 and 1948 to more rounds); the 1952 edition bucked that trend by returning to an entirely single-race format for the first time since 1928. It also used races with up to five cyclists, where other recent Games had limited individuals races to two or three competitors. A repechage was used after each round instead of only early rounds; late-round races featured three cyclists instead of the head-to-head format that had become common. This also meant that there was no bronze medal match.

The first round consisted of eight heats of three or four cyclists each; the winner of each heat advanced to the quarterfinals while all others were sent to the first repechage. The first repechage had four heats, one of four cyclists and three of five cyclists (though in one of these heats only three men started); again, the winner advanced to the quarterfinals, but this time all others were eliminated. The 12 quarterfinalists competed in four heats of three cyclists each; winners advanced to the semifinals while second and third place cyclists went to the second repechage. The second repechage had two heats of four cyclists each; the winner advanced to the semifinals while the others were all eliminated. With six semifinalists, the semifinals consisted of two heats of three men each. Once again, the winner of each heat advanced while others were sent to a third repechage. The third repechage was a single race of the four semifinal losers, with the winner advancing to the final. The final featured the remaining three riders.[2][3]

Records

The records for the sprint are 200 metre flying time trial records, kept for the qualifying round in later Games as well as for the finish of races.

World recordUnknownUnknown*UnknownUnknown
Olympic record Thomas Johnson (GBR)11.8Antwerp, Belgium9 August 1920

* World records were not tracked by the UCI until 1954.

Cyril Peacock broke the Olympic record with 11.7 seconds in the sixth heat of round 1. Werner Potzernheim matched that in the first heat of the first repechage; John Millman did the same in the third heat. Peacock recorded the same time again in the second quarterfinal. Potzernheim bettered that time in the fourth quarterfinal, finishing the last 200 metres in 11.6 seconds. Lionel Cox matched that time in the second semifinal, with Potzernheim tying it again in the third repechage.

Schedule

All times are Eastern European Summer Time (UTC+3)

Date Time Round
Monday, 28 July 195211:00Round 1
First repechage
Tuesday, 29 July 195211:00
 
18:00
 
Quarterfinals
Second repechage
Semifinals
Third repechage
Thursday, 31 July 195218:00Final

Results

Round 1 heat 1

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Lionel Cox Australia11.9Q
2Werner Potzernheim GermanyR
3Hernán Masanés ChileR

Round 1 heat 2

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Stéphan Martens Belgium12.9Q
2Kurt Nemetz AustriaR
3Netai Bysack IndiaR

Round 1 heat 3

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Franck Lenormand France12.6Q
2Kenneth Farnum JamaicaR
3Otar Dadunashvili Soviet UnionR

Round 1 heat 4

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Antonio Giménez Argentina12.8Q
2Helge Törn FinlandR
3Kihei Tomioka JapanR

Round 1 heat 5

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Enzo Sacchi Italy12.4Q
2Zdeněk Košta CzechoslovakiaR
3Muhammad Naqi Mallick PakistanR

Round 1 heat 6

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Cyril Peacock Great Britain11.7Q, OR
2Ove Krogh Rants DenmarkR
3Ion Ionita RomaniaR
4Gustavo Martínez GuatemalaR

Round 1 heat 7

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Béla Szekeres Hungary11.9Q
2John Millman CanadaR
3Fritz Siegenthaler SwitzerlandR
4Colin Dickinson New ZealandR

Round 1 heat 8

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Johan Hijzelendoorn Netherlands12.1Q
2Raymond Robinson South AfricaR
3Steven Hromjak United StatesR
4Luis Toro VenezuelaR

First repechage heat 1

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Werner Potzernheim Germany11.7Q, =OR
2Otar Dadunashvili Soviet Union
3Luis Toro Venezuela
4Steven Hromjak United States
5Helge Törn Finland

First repechage heat 2

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Ove Krogh Rants Denmark12.3Q
2Fritz Siegenthaler Switzerland
3Zdeněk Košta Czechoslovakia
4Kihei Tomioka Japan

First repechage heat 3

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1John Millman CanadaQ, =OR
2Kurt Nemetz Austria
3Muhammad Naqi Mallick Pakistan
Netai Bysack IndiaDNS
Gustavo Martínez GuatemalaDNS

First repechage heat 4

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Raymond Robinson South Africa12.3Q
2Hernán Masanés Chile
3Colin Dickinson New Zealand
4Kenneth Farnum Jamaica
5Ion Ionita Romania

Quarterfinal 1

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Lionel Cox Australia12.5Q
2Raymond Robinson South AfricaR
3Stéphan Martens BelgiumR

Quarterfinal 2

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Cyril Peacock Great Britain11.7Q, =OR
2Franck Lenormand FranceR
3John Millman CanadaR

Quarterfinal 3

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Enzo Sacchi Italy12.0Q
2Ove Krogh Rants DenmarkR
3Béla Szekeres HungaryR

Quarterfinal 4

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Werner Potzernheim Germany11.6Q, OR
2Antonio Giménez ArgentinaR
3Johan Hijzelendoorn NetherlandsR

Second repechage heat 1

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Raymond Robinson South Africa11.8Q
2John Millman Canada
3Johan Hijzelendoorn Netherlands
4Ove Krogh Rants Denmark

Second repechage heat 2

A crash in the original race of this heat resulted in a re-run. Giménez had the lead with Martens on his outside; Lenormand hit Martens's back wheel while trying to pass him. Lenormand had to be taken to the hospital for his injuries and could not compete in the re-run. Martens was able to race, but was hampered by his injuries.[4]

Original
RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Antonio Giménez Argentina12.3R
2Béla Szekeres HungaryR
Stéphan Martens BelgiumDNFR
Franck Lenormand FranceDNFR
Re-run
RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Béla Szekeres Hungary11.8Q
2Antonio Giménez Argentina
3Stéphan Martens Belgium
Franck Lenormand FranceDNS

Semifinal 1

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Enzo Sacchi Italy12.0Q
2Raymond Robinson South AfricaR
3Werner Potzernheim GermanyR

Semifinal 2

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Lionel Cox Australia11.6Q, =OR
2Cyril Peacock Great BritainR
3Béla Szekeres HungaryR

Third repechage

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Notes
1Werner Potzernheim Germany11.6Q, =OR
2Cyril Peacock Great Britain
3Raymond Robinson South Africa
4Béla Szekeres Hungary

Final

RankCyclistNationTime
200 m
Enzo Sacchi Italy12.0
Lionel Cox Australia
Werner Potzernheim Germany

Final classification

RankCyclistNation
Enzo Sacchi Italy
Lionel Cox Australia
Werner Potzernheim Germany
4 Cyril Peacock Great Britain
5 Raymond Robinson South Africa
6 Béla Szekeres Hungary
7 Antonio Giménez Argentina
John Millman Canada
9 Johan Hijzelendoorn Netherlands
Stéphan Martens Belgium
11 Franck Lenormand France
Ove Krogh Rants Denmark
13 Otar Dadunashvili Soviet Union
Hernán Masanés Chile
Kurt Nemetz Austria
Fritz Siegenthaler Switzerland
17 Colin Dickinson New Zealand
Zdeněk Košta Czechoslovakia
Muhammad Naqi Mallick Pakistan
Luis Toro Venezuela
21 Kenneth Farnum Jamaica
Steven Hromjak United States
Kihei Tomioka Japan
24 Helge Törn Finland
Ion Ionita Romania
26 Netai Bysack India
Gustavo Martínez Guatemala

References

  1. "Cycling: Men's sprint". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 2020-04-18. Retrieved 2013-01-01.
  2. "Sprint, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  3. Official Report, p. 544.
  4. Official Report, p. 541.


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