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Cycling at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's sprint

The men's cycling sprint at the 2012 Olympic Games in London took place at the London Velopark from 4 to 6 August.[1] There were 17 competitors from 17 nations, with nations once again limited to one cyclist each (the limit had fluctuated between one and two since 1928). The event was won by Jason Kenny of Great Britain, the nation's second consecutive victory in the men's sprint. Kenny was the eighth man to win multiple medals in the event. Kenny beat Grégory Baugé of France in the final. Australia's Shane Perkins took bronze.

Men's cycling sprint
at the Games of the XXX Olympiad
Jason Kenny
VenueLondon Velopark
Dates4 to 6 August
Competitors17 from 17 nations
Medalists
← 2008
2016 →

Background edit

This was the 25th appearance of the event, which has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1904 and 1912. Two of the quarterfinalists from 2008 returned: silver medalist Jason Kenny of Great Britain and eighth-place finisher Azizulhasni Awang of Malaysia. The favorite was Grégory Baugé of France, the four-time world champion (2009–2012). The British team, which had both of the finalists at the 2008 Beijing Games (Kenny and champion Chris Hoy), had to choose one because of the rule change that limited nations to one cyclist; Kenny, who had taken silver in the 2011 and 2012 world championships, was selected over Hoy, who had taken bronze in those years. (Baugé's 2011 title was later stripped due to missed doping tests, retroactively elevating Kenny and Hoy to world champion and runner-up). Kenny had never beaten Baugé head-to-head.[2]

No nations made their debut in the men's sprint. France made its 25th appearance, the only nation to have competed at every appearance of the event.

Qualification edit

There were 18 quota places available for the men's sprint, with a maximum of one cyclist per nation. The 10 nations qualified for the team sprint event could each enter one member of the team in the individual sprint. The other eight places went to the top eight remaining nations on the 2010–12 UCI rankings not yet qualified.

Competition format edit

The event was a single-elimination tournament, with repechages after the first two rounds, after seeding via time trial. The time trial involved an 875-metre distance, but with only the last 200 metres timed. All other races were 750 metres (three laps of the track) with side-by-side starts, with time kept for the last 200 metres. The first two main rounds featured single head-to-head races, with winners advancing and losers competing in repechages. Repechage races were contested by up to 3 cyclists. Beginning with the quarterfinals, each match pitted two cyclists against each other in best-of-three races.[3][2]

Records edit

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 record   Kevin Sireau (FRA) 9.572 Moscow, Russia 30 May 2009
Olympic record   Chris Hoy (GBR) 9.815 Beijing, China 17 August 2008

Jason Kenny set a new Olympic record of 9.713 seconds in the qualifying round.

Schedule edit

All times are (British Summer Time)

Date Time Round
Saturday, 4 August 2012 10:00
11:01
16:00
16:35
17:34
18:30
Qualifying round
Round 1
First repechage
1/8 finals
Second repechage
Classification 9–12
Sunday, 5 August 2012 16:34
18:47
Quarterfinals
Classification 5–8
Monday, 6 August 2012 16:00
17:43
 
Semifinals
Bronze medal match
Final

Results edit

Qualifying round edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Jason Kenny   Great Britain 9.713 74.127 Q, OR
2 Grégory Baugé   France 9.952 72.347 Q
3 Shane Perkins   Australia 9.987 72.093 Q
4 Robert Förstemann   Germany 10.072 71.485 Q
5 Denis Dmitriev   Russia 10.088 71.371 Q
6 Hersony Canelón   Venezuela 10.123 71.125 Q
7 Seiichiro Nakagawa   Japan 10.144 70.977 Q
8 Zhang Miao   China 10.155 70.901 Q
9 Eddie Dawkins   New Zealand 10.201 70.581 Q
10 Njisane Phillip   Trinidad and Tobago 10.202 70.574 Q
11 Azizulhasni Awang   Malaysia 10.226 70.408 Q
12 Jimmy Watkins   United States 10.247 70.264 Q
13 Pavel Kelemen   Czech Republic 10.311 69.828 Q
14 Damian Zieliński   Poland 10.323 69.747 Q
15 Bernard Esterhuizen   South Africa 10.350 69.565 Q
16 Hodei Mazquiarán   Spain 10.604 67.898 Q
17 Zafeiris Volikakis   Greece 10.663 67.523 Q

Round 1 edit

Heat 1 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Grégory Baugé   France wo Q
Zafeiris Volikakis   Greece DNS

Heat 2 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Shane Perkins   Australia 10.722 67.151 Q
2 Hodei Mazquiarán   Spain R

Heat 3 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Robert Förstemann   Germany 11.100 64.864 Q
2 Bernard Esterhuizen   South Africa R

Heat 4 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Denis Dmitriev   Russia 10.690 67.352 Q
2 Damian Zieliński   Poland R

Heat 5 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Pavel Kelemen   Czech Republic 10.840 66.420 Q
2 Hersony Canelón   Venezuela R

Heat 6 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Jimmy Watkins   United States 10.399 69.237 Q
2 Seiichiro Nakagawa   Japan R

Heat 7 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Azizulhasni Awang   Malaysia 10.473 68.748 Q
2 Zhang Miao   China R

Heat 8 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Njisane Phillip   Trinidad and Tobago 10.221 70.443 Q
2 Eddie Dawkins   New Zealand R

First repechage edit

First repechage heat 1 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Hersony Canelón   Venezuela 10.439 68.972 Q
2 Eddie Dawkins   New Zealand

First repechage heat 2 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Seiichiro Nakagawa   Japan 10.792 66.716 Q
2 Damian Zieliński   Poland

First repechage heat 3 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Bernard Esterhuizen   South Africa 10.762 66.902 Q
2 Hodei Mazquiarán   Spain
3 Zhang Miao   China

1/8 finals edit

1/8 final 1 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Jason Kenny   Great Britain 10.363 69.477 Q
2 Bernard Esterhuizen   South Africa R

1/8 final 2 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Grégory Baugé   France 10.490 68.636 Q
2 Seiichiro Nakagawa   Japan R

1/8 final 3 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Shane Perkins   Australia 10.978 65.585 Q
2 Hersony Canelón   Venezuela REL R

1/8 final 4 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Njisane Phillip   Trinidad and Tobago 10.467 Q
2 Robert Förstemann   Germany R

1/8 final 5 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Denis Dmitriev   Russia 10.278 70.052 Q
2 Azizulhasni Awang   Malaysia R

1/8 final 6 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Jimmy Watkins   United States 10.511 68.499 Q
2 Pavel Kelemen   Czech Republic R

Second repechage edit

Second repechage heat 1 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Robert Förstemann   Germany 10.881 66.170 Q
2 Pavel Kelemen   Czech Republic C
3 Bernard Esterhuizen   South Africa C

Second repechage heat 2 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
Notes
1 Azizulhasni Awang   Malaysia 10.456 68.859 Q
2 Hersony Canelón   Venezuela C
3 Seiichiro Nakagawa   Japan C

Quarterfinals edit

Quarterfinal 1 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3 Notes
1 Jason Kenny   Great Britain 10.433 10.030 Q
2 Azizulhasni Awang   Malaysia C

Quarterfinal 2 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3 Notes
1 Grégory Baugé   France 10.472 10.300 Q
2 Robert Förstemann   Germany C

Quarterfinal 3 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3 Notes
1 Shane Perkins   Australia 10.520 10.263 Q
2 Jimmy Watkins   United States C

Quarterfinal 4 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3 Notes
1 Njisane Phillip   Trinidad and Tobago 10.545 10.300 Q
2 Denis Dmitriev   Russia C

Semifinals edit

Semifinal 1 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3 Notes
1 Jason Kenny   Great Britain 10.159 10.166 Q
2 Njisane Phillip   Trinidad and Tobago B

Semifinal 2 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3 Notes
1 Grégory Baugé   France 10.358 10.268 Q
2 Shane Perkins   Australia B

Finals edit

Classification 9—12 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
9 Seiichiro Nakagawa   Japan 10.950 65.753
10 Pavel Kelemen   Czech Republic
11 Bernard Esterhuizen   South Africa
12 Hersony Canelón   Venezuela

Classification 5—8 edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Time
200 m
Speed
km/h
5 Denis Dmitriev   Russia 10.340 69.632
6 Jimmy Watkins   United States
7 Robert Förstemann   Germany
8 Azizulhasni Awang   Malaysia

Bronze medal match edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3
  Shane Perkins   Australia 10.489 10.297
4 Njisane Phillip   Trinidad and Tobago

Gold medal match edit

Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3
  Jason Kenny   Great Britain 10.232 10.308
  Grégory Baugé   France

Notes edit

The first round was meant to have 9 heats, with a total of 18 riders. However, due to a rider from the Netherlands withdrawing from the competition the first round had 17 riders with Jason Kenny receiving a bye and therefore automatically qualifying for the next round. Because there was 17 competitors rather than 18, Christos Volikakis, who qualified in 17th place thought that he did not qualify and the competition was switched to a 16 rider format, resulting in him leaving the competition. This was not the case, and therefore Grégory Baugé also qualified automatically. Despite qualifying automatically, both riders had to ride half a lap of the track to qualify.[4]

Final classification edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Cycling Track". Archived from the original on 25 May 2012. Retrieved 9 February 2012.
  2. ^ a b "Sprint, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
  3. ^ "Sprint format competition". Archived from the original on 4 September 2012. Retrieved 3 May 2012.
  4. ^ . www.cyclingweekly.co.uk. Archived from the original on 26 July 2014.

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The men s cycling sprint at the 2012 Olympic Games in London took place at the London Velopark from 4 to 6 August 1 There were 17 competitors from 17 nations with nations once again limited to one cyclist each the limit had fluctuated between one and two since 1928 The event was won by Jason Kenny of Great Britain the nation s second consecutive victory in the men s sprint Kenny was the eighth man to win multiple medals in the event Kenny beat Gregory Bauge of France in the final Australia s Shane Perkins took bronze Men s cycling sprintat the Games of the XXX OlympiadJason KennyVenueLondon VeloparkDates4 to 6 AugustCompetitors17 from 17 nationsMedalistsJason Kenny Great BritainGregory Bauge FranceShane Perkins Australia 20082016 Contents 1 Background 2 Qualification 3 Competition format 4 Records 5 Schedule 6 Results 6 1 Qualifying round 6 2 Round 1 6 2 1 Heat 1 6 2 2 Heat 2 6 2 3 Heat 3 6 2 4 Heat 4 6 2 5 Heat 5 6 2 6 Heat 6 6 2 7 Heat 7 6 2 8 Heat 8 6 3 First repechage 6 3 1 First repechage heat 1 6 3 2 First repechage heat 2 6 3 3 First repechage heat 3 6 4 1 8 finals 6 4 1 1 8 final 1 6 4 2 1 8 final 2 6 4 3 1 8 final 3 6 4 4 1 8 final 4 6 4 5 1 8 final 5 6 4 6 1 8 final 6 6 5 Second repechage 6 5 1 Second repechage heat 1 6 5 2 Second repechage heat 2 6 6 Quarterfinals 6 6 1 Quarterfinal 1 6 6 2 Quarterfinal 2 6 6 3 Quarterfinal 3 6 6 4 Quarterfinal 4 6 7 Semifinals 6 7 1 Semifinal 1 6 7 2 Semifinal 2 6 8 Finals 6 8 1 Classification 9 12 6 8 2 Classification 5 8 6 8 3 Bronze medal match 6 8 4 Gold medal match 7 Notes 8 Final classification 9 ReferencesBackground editThis was the 25th appearance of the event which has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1904 and 1912 Two of the quarterfinalists from 2008 returned silver medalist Jason Kenny of Great Britain and eighth place finisher Azizulhasni Awang of Malaysia The favorite was Gregory Bauge of France the four time world champion 2009 2012 The British team which had both of the finalists at the 2008 Beijing Games Kenny and champion Chris Hoy had to choose one because of the rule change that limited nations to one cyclist Kenny who had taken silver in the 2011 and 2012 world championships was selected over Hoy who had taken bronze in those years Bauge s 2011 title was later stripped due to missed doping tests retroactively elevating Kenny and Hoy to world champion and runner up Kenny had never beaten Bauge head to head 2 No nations made their debut in the men s sprint France made its 25th appearance the only nation to have competed at every appearance of the event Qualification editMain article Cycling at the 2012 Summer Olympics Qualification There were 18 quota places available for the men s sprint with a maximum of one cyclist per nation The 10 nations qualified for the team sprint event could each enter one member of the team in the individual sprint The other eight places went to the top eight remaining nations on the 2010 12 UCI rankings not yet qualified Competition format editThe event was a single elimination tournament with repechages after the first two rounds after seeding via time trial The time trial involved an 875 metre distance but with only the last 200 metres timed All other races were 750 metres three laps of the track with side by side starts with time kept for the last 200 metres The first two main rounds featured single head to head races with winners advancing and losers competing in repechages Repechage races were contested by up to 3 cyclists Beginning with the quarterfinals each match pitted two cyclists against each other in best of three races 3 2 Records editThe 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 record nbsp Kevin Sireau FRA 9 572 Moscow Russia 30 May 2009Olympic record nbsp Chris Hoy GBR 9 815 Beijing China 17 August 2008Jason Kenny set a new Olympic record of 9 713 seconds in the qualifying round Schedule editAll times are British Summer Time Date Time RoundSaturday 4 August 2012 10 0011 0116 0016 3517 3418 30 Qualifying roundRound 1First repechage1 8 finalsSecond repechageClassification 9 12Sunday 5 August 2012 16 3418 47 QuarterfinalsClassification 5 8Monday 6 August 2012 16 0017 43 SemifinalsBronze medal matchFinalResults editQualifying round edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Jason Kenny nbsp Great Britain 9 713 74 127 Q OR2 Gregory Bauge nbsp France 9 952 72 347 Q3 Shane Perkins nbsp Australia 9 987 72 093 Q4 Robert Forstemann nbsp Germany 10 072 71 485 Q5 Denis Dmitriev nbsp Russia 10 088 71 371 Q6 Hersony Canelon nbsp Venezuela 10 123 71 125 Q7 Seiichiro Nakagawa nbsp Japan 10 144 70 977 Q8 Zhang Miao nbsp China 10 155 70 901 Q9 Eddie Dawkins nbsp New Zealand 10 201 70 581 Q10 Njisane Phillip nbsp Trinidad and Tobago 10 202 70 574 Q11 Azizulhasni Awang nbsp Malaysia 10 226 70 408 Q12 Jimmy Watkins nbsp United States 10 247 70 264 Q13 Pavel Kelemen nbsp Czech Republic 10 311 69 828 Q14 Damian Zielinski nbsp Poland 10 323 69 747 Q15 Bernard Esterhuizen nbsp South Africa 10 350 69 565 Q16 Hodei Mazquiaran nbsp Spain 10 604 67 898 Q17 Zafeiris Volikakis nbsp Greece 10 663 67 523 QRound 1 edit Heat 1 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Gregory Bauge nbsp France wo Q Zafeiris Volikakis nbsp Greece DNSHeat 2 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Shane Perkins nbsp Australia 10 722 67 151 Q2 Hodei Mazquiaran nbsp Spain RHeat 3 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Robert Forstemann nbsp Germany 11 100 64 864 Q2 Bernard Esterhuizen nbsp South Africa RHeat 4 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Denis Dmitriev nbsp Russia 10 690 67 352 Q2 Damian Zielinski nbsp Poland RHeat 5 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Pavel Kelemen nbsp Czech Republic 10 840 66 420 Q2 Hersony Canelon nbsp Venezuela RHeat 6 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Jimmy Watkins nbsp United States 10 399 69 237 Q2 Seiichiro Nakagawa nbsp Japan RHeat 7 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Azizulhasni Awang nbsp Malaysia 10 473 68 748 Q2 Zhang Miao nbsp China RHeat 8 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Njisane Phillip nbsp Trinidad and Tobago 10 221 70 443 Q2 Eddie Dawkins nbsp New Zealand RFirst repechage edit First repechage heat 1 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Hersony Canelon nbsp Venezuela 10 439 68 972 Q2 Eddie Dawkins nbsp New ZealandFirst repechage heat 2 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Seiichiro Nakagawa nbsp Japan 10 792 66 716 Q2 Damian Zielinski nbsp PolandFirst repechage heat 3 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Bernard Esterhuizen nbsp South Africa 10 762 66 902 Q2 Hodei Mazquiaran nbsp Spain3 Zhang Miao nbsp China1 8 finals edit 1 8 final 1 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Jason Kenny nbsp Great Britain 10 363 69 477 Q2 Bernard Esterhuizen nbsp South Africa R1 8 final 2 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Gregory Bauge nbsp France 10 490 68 636 Q2 Seiichiro Nakagawa nbsp Japan R1 8 final 3 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Shane Perkins nbsp Australia 10 978 65 585 Q2 Hersony Canelon nbsp Venezuela REL R1 8 final 4 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Njisane Phillip nbsp Trinidad and Tobago 10 467 Q2 Robert Forstemann nbsp Germany R1 8 final 5 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Denis Dmitriev nbsp Russia 10 278 70 052 Q2 Azizulhasni Awang nbsp Malaysia R1 8 final 6 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Jimmy Watkins nbsp United States 10 511 68 499 Q2 Pavel Kelemen nbsp Czech Republic RSecond repechage edit Second repechage heat 1 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Robert Forstemann nbsp Germany 10 881 66 170 Q2 Pavel Kelemen nbsp Czech Republic C3 Bernard Esterhuizen nbsp South Africa CSecond repechage heat 2 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h Notes1 Azizulhasni Awang nbsp Malaysia 10 456 68 859 Q2 Hersony Canelon nbsp Venezuela C3 Seiichiro Nakagawa nbsp Japan CQuarterfinals edit Quarterfinal 1 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3 Notes1 Jason Kenny nbsp Great Britain 10 433 10 030 Q2 Azizulhasni Awang nbsp Malaysia CQuarterfinal 2 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3 Notes1 Gregory Bauge nbsp France 10 472 10 300 Q2 Robert Forstemann nbsp Germany CQuarterfinal 3 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3 Notes1 Shane Perkins nbsp Australia 10 520 10 263 Q2 Jimmy Watkins nbsp United States CQuarterfinal 4 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3 Notes1 Njisane Phillip nbsp Trinidad and Tobago 10 545 10 300 Q2 Denis Dmitriev nbsp Russia CSemifinals edit Semifinal 1 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3 Notes1 Jason Kenny nbsp Great Britain 10 159 10 166 Q2 Njisane Phillip nbsp Trinidad and Tobago BSemifinal 2 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3 Notes1 Gregory Bauge nbsp France 10 358 10 268 Q2 Shane Perkins nbsp Australia BFinals edit Classification 9 12 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h9 Seiichiro Nakagawa nbsp Japan 10 950 65 75310 Pavel Kelemen nbsp Czech Republic11 Bernard Esterhuizen nbsp South Africa12 Hersony Canelon nbsp VenezuelaClassification 5 8 edit Rank Cyclist Nation Time200 m Speedkm h5 Denis Dmitriev nbsp Russia 10 340 69 6326 Jimmy Watkins nbsp United States7 Robert Forstemann nbsp Germany8 Azizulhasni Awang nbsp MalaysiaBronze medal match edit Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3 nbsp Shane Perkins nbsp Australia 10 489 10 297 4 Njisane Phillip nbsp Trinidad and Tobago Gold medal match edit Rank Cyclist Nation Race 1 Race 2 Race 3 nbsp Jason Kenny nbsp Great Britain 10 232 10 308 nbsp Gregory Bauge nbsp France Notes editThe first round was meant to have 9 heats with a total of 18 riders However due to a rider from the Netherlands withdrawing from the competition the first round had 17 riders with Jason Kenny receiving a bye and therefore automatically qualifying for the next round Because there was 17 competitors rather than 18 Christos Volikakis who qualified in 17th place thought that he did not qualify and the competition was switched to a 16 rider format resulting in him leaving the competition This was not the case and therefore Gregory Bauge also qualified automatically Despite qualifying automatically both riders had to ride half a lap of the track to qualify 4 Final classification editRank Cyclist Nation nbsp Jason Kenny nbsp Great Britain nbsp Gregory Bauge nbsp France nbsp Shane Perkins nbsp Australia4 Njisane Phillip nbsp Trinidad and Tobago5 Denis Dmitriev nbsp Russia6 Jimmy Watkins nbsp United States7 Robert Forstemann nbsp Germany8 Azizulhasni Awang nbsp Malaysia9 Seiichiro Nakagawa nbsp Japan10 Pavel Kelemen nbsp Czech Republic11 Bernard Esterhuizen nbsp South Africa12 Hersony Canelon nbsp Venezuela13 Zhang Miao nbsp China14 Eddie Dawkins nbsp New Zealand15 Damian Zielinski nbsp Poland16 Hodei Mazquiaran nbsp Spain17 Zafeiris Volikakis nbsp GreeceReferences edit Cycling Track Archived from the original on 25 May 2012 Retrieved 9 February 2012 a b Sprint Men Olympedia Retrieved 18 November 2020 Sprint format competition Archived from the original on 4 September 2012 Retrieved 3 May 2012 Kenny lights up a stuttering men s sprint competition Cycling Weekly www cyclingweekly co uk Archived from the original on 26 July 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cycling at the 2012 Summer Olympics Men 27s sprint amp oldid 1175605508, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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