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October 15, 2022
Track Cycling – World Championship 2022 – DAY 4
Since they were first added to the cycling calendar in 1893, the UCI Track World Championships have drawn the world’s best riders to their events to compete for some of the most prestigious prizes in the sport –
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October 15, 2022
Track Cycling – World Championship 2022 – DAY 4
Since they were first added to the cycling calendar in 1893, the UCI Track World Championships have drawn the world’s best riders to their events to compete for some of the most prestigious prizes in the sport – rainbow jerseys. There’ll be 22 rainbow jerseys on offer this year, split between men and women across 11 distinct events. The 2022 Track World Championships will be held from October 12th to 16th in Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, France. There’ll be rainbow jerseys on the line in each of the major sub-disciplines of track cycling, including Sprint, Keirin, Time Trial, Team Sprint, Team Pursuit, Individual Pursuit, Omnium, Points Race, Scratch Race, Madison and Elimination Race.
Program :
Day 4 – Saturday – October 15th
Women’s Time Trial (500m)
Women’s Madison (30km)
Women’s Individual Pursuit
Men’s Omnium (Final Points Race)
Ethan Hayter (Great Britain) won the Men’s Omnium on Saturday at the 2022 UCI Track World Championships at the Saint Quentin en Yvelines velodrome to successfully defend his 2021 title. On the last lap of the final event, Benjamin Thomas (France) earned the silver medal, while Aaron Gate (New Zeland) hung on to a podium spot with bronze.
Gate took the early lead in the Omnium with a victory in the Scratch race. Shunsuke Imamura (Japan) was second and Kelland O’Brien (Australia) took third just ahead of Hayter.
In the Tempo Race, J.E. Arango Carvajal (Colombia) took a lap on the field early in the race to earn 23 points. With eight laps to go, Imamura charged to the lead and held on with 41 points to take the win. Hayter finished in second place with 30 points, while Gate was third with 24 points.
Elia Viviani (Italy) held tough in the Elimination race until he ran out of gas in the final foursome on the track. Canadian Dylan Bibic was next to fade to take the third place slot.
It came down to a sprint between 2017 Omnium World Champion Thomas Benjamin of France and Hayter, the reigning world champion. To the delight of the home crowd, Benjamin came around Hayter with half a lap to go to take the Elimination race. However, the points for second place put Hayter in the Omnium lead.
The last sprint in the Points Race was the decisive moment for the Omnium title. Hayter held a nine-point margin over Gate as the peloton charged across the final two laps. From the back of the peloton, Thomas was charging on a solo attack to lap the field and caught the back of the peloton in the closing metres to gain 20 points, which boosted him into the silver medal position. Hayter’s second-place finish, along with top points in three sprints, gave him enough to hold the Omnium title.
Lotte Kopecky and Shari Bossuyt secured the gold medal for Belgium in the Women’s Madison on Saturday. Clara Copponi and Valentine Fortin of France missed the top spot by one point and settled for the silver. Denmark’s Amalie Dideriksen and Julie Leth finished third.
The Belgian pair were the only team to lap the field and used the tactical late move to soar even with France. It was the second Madison world title for Kopecky, who won the first-ever women’s event in 2017.
Belgium had not scored any points through the majority of the race, so Bossuyt attacked with 38 laps to go and then throwing Kopecky into action three laps later. France launched a counter-attack in the chase. Belgium took the next sprint to get on the board. Leading with 20 points, France continued to lead the chase of Belgium with under 30 laps to go.
Belgium then went equal in points with France as Kopecky caught the back of the peloton and by 18 to go had gone up seven points over France. Australia trailed another six points back for third.
With one sprint remaining, France trailed Belgium for the gold by five points. Denmark launched an attack to lap the field with only seven laps to go. New Zealand and Great Britain were then involved in a big crash with two laps to go, Michaela Drummond of New Zealand moving up the track and into Laura Kenny.
At the end, the home crowd was disappointed as France finished one point behind Belgium.
On the early laps, some of the lights went out on the back side of the track, but it did not impede Italy and France from taking the early lead. Making a move on the outside was Georgia Baker taking five points for Australia.
Then the race was neutralised with 110 to go for organisers to sort out the issue with the lights. Several riders had heavy falls on that back corner, none serious, including Mia Griffin of Ireland. All riders were taken off the course.
After a 10-minute delay, racing resumed, Canada moved to the front, but when the bell rang for the second sprint, Laura Kenney got the five points for Great Britain, coming around the top of riders from Denmark and the United States.
Each time one of the French riders moved to the front, the crowd gave a resounding roar. Fortin rewarded the crowd with top points on the third bell, putting France into a tie with Australia for the lead.
The second half of the race continued with the four strongest teams in control at the front – Great Britain, Australia, Germany and Denmark – but no one got away until Belgium.
Women’s Madison Results :
1 Belgium 32
Shari Bossuyt
Lotte Kopecky
2 France 31
Clara Copponi
Valentine Fortin
3 Denmark 23
Amalie Dideriksen
Aleandra Manly
4 Australia 19
Georgia Baker
Alexandra Manly
5 Great Britain 17
Neah Evans
Laura Kenny
6 Netherlands 15
Maike van der Duin
Marit Raaijmakers
7 Italy 11
Rachele Barbieri
Chiara Consonni
8 New Zealand 7
Michaela Drummond
Ally Wollaston
9 United States 2
Lily Williams
Megan Jastrab
10 Switzerland 1
Lena Mettraux
Aline Seitz
11 Germany
Lena Charlotte Reissner
Lea Lin Teutenberg
12 Canada
Maggie Coles-Lyster
Sarah van Dam
13 Ireland
Mia Griffin
Alice Sharpe
France’s Taky Marie Divine Kouame surprised the German powerhouse Emma Hinze and won the women’s 500-metre Time Trial at the 2022 UCI World Championships in Paris on Saturday. She was the only woman under 33 seconds en route to securing her world title.
Emma Hinze (Germany), who set the best time in qualifying, took the silver medal. Yufang Guo (China), who was seventh best in qualifying, blasted around with the third best time and earned the bronze medal.
Kouame had a huge start in the final, looking for a medal at her home track in Paris with the crowd filling the velodrome with raucous applause and cheering. She set the best time of the day, 32.835, with only the triple World Champion to take the course. Hinze never made a significant move and finished .216 back.
Women’s 500m Time Trial Results :
1 Taky Marie Divine (France) 0:00:33
2 Emma Hinze (Germany) 0:00:00
3 Yufang Guo (China) 0:00:00
4 Hetty van der Wouw (Netherlands) 0:00:00
5 Kristina Clonan (Australia) 0:00:00
6 Martha Boyona Pineda (Colombia) 0:00:01
7 Kelsey Mitchell (Canada) 0:00:01
8 Kyra Lamberink (Netherlands) 0:00:01
Franziska Brausse (Germany) won the women’s individual pursuit at the 2022 UCI Track World Championships in a time of 3:19.427. Bryony Botha (New Zealand) secured the silver. The battle for bronze was taken by Jose Knight (Great Britain), who powered across the final 1,000 metres to edge out Mieke Kroger (Germany).
Just like the qualifying round, Brausse put down the best time ahead of Botha. In the final round she put time into Botha straightaway in the opening 1,000 metres. While Botha looked to be gaining some time in the middle section of the race, Brausse hit another gear in the final 250 metres to take the world championship victory. The German succeeded her teammate Lisa Brennauer for the rainbow jersey.
A third year was the charm for Brausse at the Worlds in the individual pursuit, as she took the bronze medal in 2020 and the silver in 2021. She adds her first individual world title 2021 world title she won with her German teammates in the women’s Team Pursuit last year in Roubaix and the Team Pursuit gold at the Tokyo Olympic Games.
Women’s Individual Pursuit Results :
1 Franziska Brausse (Germany) 0:03:19
2 Bryony Botha (New Zealand) 0:00:00
3 Josie Knight (Great Britain) 0:00:02
4 Mieke Kroger (Germany) 0:00:03
5 Anna Morris (Great Britain)
6 Maeve Plouffe (Australia)
7 Kelly Murphy (Ireland)
8 Letizia Paternoster (Italy)
9 Daniek Hengeveld (Netherlands)
10 Vittoria Guazzini (Italy)
11 Marion Borras (France)
12 Sararh van Dam (Canada)
13 Fabienne Buri (Switzerland)
14 Susu Wang (China)
15 Lana Eberle (Germany)
16 Marith Vanhove (Belgium)
17 Zhilin Huang (China)
18 Shayna Powless (United States)
19 Ruby West (Canada)
20 Ziortza Isasi Cristobal (Spain)
21 Yanina Kuskova (Uzbekistan)