Cycling at the 2004 Summer Olympics – Men's road time trial

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Cycling at the
2004 Summer Olympics
Road cycling
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Road race   men   women
Time trial men women
Track cycling
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Individual pursuit men women
Team pursuit men
Sprint men women
Team sprint men
Time trial men women
Points race men women
Keirin men
Madison men
Mountain biking
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Cross-country men women

Men's Time Trial at the 2004 Summer Olympics (Cycling):

Medalists

Gold Viatcheslav Ekimov
 Russia
Silver Bobby Julich
 United States
Bronze Michael Rogers
 Australia

Of the top riders, it soon became clear that Sydney 2000 time trial gold medal winner Russian rider Viatcheslav Ekimov was setting the time to beat. The current world time trial champion, Michael Rogers from Australia, appeared to match Ekimov's times, but faded in the final kilometres. Tyler Hamilton, from the USA, had problems with his radio shortly after the start, and rode the race effectively without radio communication. Hamilton finished strongly claiming the gold medal for the USA, averaging 50.062 km/h to finish the 48 km course in 57:31.74. Ekimov was awarded the silver medal, with a time of 57:50.58 nearly 19 seconds behind Hamilton, with another American, Bobby Julich, in a time of 57:58.19 inching out Michael Rogers (58:01.67) for the bronze medal.

Michael Rich (58:09.46) from Germany finished 37 seconds behind Hamilton for fifth, with Kazakhstan rider Alexander Vinokourov 1:26 behind the leader. The last person to start, the 2000 Olympics road race winner and former world time trial champion Jan Ullrich from Germany, could not match the pace and ended with a time of 59:02.04, one and a half minutes behind Hamilton in seventh position.

Tyler Hamilton's gold medal came into question when he failed a blood doping test. He was initially allowed to keep the medal after a lab mix-up spoiled the backup blood sample.[1][2] Hamilton subsequently failed another doping test during the following month's Vuelta a España. This time, the backup sample confirmed the offense, and Hamilton was given a two-year ban.[3]

On May 20, 2011, the Wall Street Journal reported that Hamilton returned his gold medal to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency after Hamilton acknowledged to 60 Minutes that he used doping products during his career. The International Olympic Committee responded in August 2012 by stripping Hamilton of his medal.[4]

Results

Final results[5]
Rank Cyclist Time
DSQ  Tyler Hamilton (USA) 57:31.74
1st  Viatcheslav Ekimov (RUS) 57:50.58
2nd  Bobby Julich (USA) 57:58.19
3rd  Michael Rogers (AUS) 58:01.67
4  Michael Rich (GER) 58:09.46
5  Alexander Vinokourov (KAZ) 58:58.14
6  Jan Ullrich (GER) 59:02.04
7  Santiago Botero (COL) 59:04.76
8  Igor González de Galdeano (ESP) 59:27.25
9  Fabian Cancellara (SUI) 59:42.38
10  Yuriy Krivtsov (UKR) 59:49.40
11  Christophe Moreau (FRA) 59:50.28
12  Marc Wauters (BEL) 59:59.63
13  Michal Hrazdira (CZE) 1:00:07.23
14  Víctor Hugo Peña (COL) 1:00:09.89
15  Iván Gutiérrez (ESP) 1:00:22.80
16  Rene Andrle (CZE) 1:00:27.29
17  Peter van Petegem (BEL) 1:00:31.49
18  Frank Høj (DEN) 1:00:35.73
19  Thomas Dekker (NED) 1:00:37.49
20  László Bodrogi (HUN) 1:00:38.05
21  Serhiy Honchar (UKR) 1:00:44.31
22  Evgeny Vakker (KGZ) 1:01:00.47
23  Sérgio Paulinho (POR) 1:01:21.10
24  Benoît Joachim (LUX) 1:01:25.63
25  Rubens Bertogliati (SUI) 1:02:16.56
26  Kurt Asle Arvesen (NOR) 1:02:21.28
27  Evgeni Petrov (RUS) 1:02:50.32
28  Stuart Dangerfield (GBR) 1:03:00.72
29  Dawid Krupa (POL) 1:03:07.05
30  Thor Hushovd (NOR) 1:03:10.36
31  Heath Blackgrove (NZL) 1:03:20.11
32  Thomas Lovkvist (SWE) 1:03:43.70
33  Gorazd Stangelj (SLO) 1:03:45:84
34  Matej Jurčo (SVK) 1:04:22.58
35  Slawomir Kohut (POL) 1:06:19.29
 Andrey Kashechkin (KAZ) DNF
 Robert Hunter (RSA) DNS
22x20px Filippo Pozzato (ITA) DNS

(DNS/F = Did Not Start/Finish)

References

  1. Hamilton faces Greek drug probe, BBC on Monday, 20 December 2004.
  2. CAS rejects Russian appeal to strip Tyler Hamilton of Olympic gold, USAToday.com on Tuesday, 27 June 2006.
  3. Hamilton given two-year doping ban, CNN on Tuesday, April 19, 2005.
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Sports-reference