The Men's sprint competition at the 2021 UCI Track Cycling World Championships was held on 23 and 24 October 2021.[1][2]

Results

Qualifying

The qualifying was started on 23 October at 12:24.[3] The top four riders advanced directly to the 1/8 finals; places 5 to 28 advance to the 1/16 final.

Rank Name Nation Time Behind Notes
1 Harrie Lavreysen  Netherlands 9.418 Q
2 Nicholas Paul  Trinidad and Tobago 9.421 +0.003 Q
3 Mikhail Iakovlev Russian Cycling Federation 9.499 +0.081 Q
4 Sébastien Vigier  France 9.583 +0.165 Q
5 Mateusz Rudyk  Poland 9.641 +0.223 q
6 Jeffrey Hoogland  Netherlands 9.666 +0.248 q
7 Stefan Bötticher  Germany 9.686 +0.268 q
8 Jair Tjon En Fa  Suriname 9.707 +0.289 q
9 Rayan Helal  France 9.723 +0.305 q
10 Daniel Rochna  Poland 9.788 +0.370 q
11 Muhammad Shah Firdaus Sahrom  Malaysia 9.800 +0.382 q
12 Nick Wammes  Canada 9.808 +0.390 q
13 Anton Höhne  Germany 9.834 +0.416 q
14 Kento Yamasaki  Japan 9.835 +0.417 q
15 Joseph Truman  Great Britain 9.836 +0.418 q
16 Sándor Szalontay  Hungary 9.858 +0.440 q
17 Hamish Turnbull  Great Britain 9.931 +0.513 q
18 Pavel Yakushevskiy Russian Cycling Federation 9.957 +0.539 q
19 Kohei Terasaki  Japan 9.979 +0.561 q
20 Kevin Quintero  Colombia 9.982 +0.564 q
21 Juan Peralta  Spain 10.004 +0.586 q
22 Martin Čechman  Czech Republic 10.029 +0.611 q
23 Jai Angsuthasawit  Thailand 10.060 +0.642 q
24 Vasilijus Lendel  Lithuania 10.139 +0.721 q
25 Juan Ochoa  Colombia 10.201 +0.783 q
26 Edgar Verdugo  Mexico 10.322 +0.904 q
27 Norbert Szabo  Romania 10.375 +0.957 q
28 Juan Ruiz  Mexico 10.406 +0.988 q
29 Mitchell Sparrow  South Africa 10.485 +1.067
30 Mohamed Elyas Yusoff  Singapore 10.697 +1.279

1/16 finals

The 1/16 finals were started on 23 October at 12:47.[4] Each heat winner advanced to the 1/8 finals.

Heat Rank Name Nation Gap Notes
1 1 Mateusz Rudyk  Poland Q
1 2 Juan Ruiz  Mexico +0.109
2 1 Jeffrey Hoogland  Netherlands Q
2 2 Norbert Szabo  Romania +0.084
3 1 Stefan Bötticher  Germany Q
3 2 Edgar Verdugo  Mexico +0.142
4 1 Jair Tjon En Fa  Suriname Q
4 2 Juan Ochoa  Colombia +0.202
5 1 Rayan Helal  France Q
5 2 Vasilijus Lendel  Lithuania +0.238
6 1 Daniel Rochna  Poland Q
6 2 Jai Angsuthasawit  Thailand +0.045
7 1 Muhammad Shah Firdaus Sahrom  Malaysia Q
7 2 Martin Čechman  Czech Republic +1.160
8 1 Nick Wammes  Canada Q
8 2 Juan Peralta  Spain +0.161
9 1 Anton Höhne  Germany Q
9 2 Kevin Quintero  Colombia +0.060
10 1 Kento Yamasaki  Japan Q
10 2 Kohei Terasaki  Japan +0.047
11 1 Joseph Truman  Great Britain Q
11 2 Pavel Yakushevskiy Russian Cycling Federation +0.057
12 2 Hamish Turnbull  Great Britain Q
12 1 Sándor Szalontay  Hungary +0.072

1/8 finals

The 1/8 finals were started on 23 October at 14:17.[5] Each heat winner advanced to the quarterfinals.

Heat Rank Name Nation Gap Notes
1 1 Harrie Lavreysen  Netherlands Q
1 2 Hamish Turnbull  Great Britain +0.951
2 1 Nicholas Paul  Trinidad and Tobago Q
2 2 Joseph Truman  Great Britain +0.595
3 1 Mikhail Iakovlev Russian Cycling Federation Q
3 2 Kento Yamasaki  Japan +0.021
4 1 Sébastien Vigier  France Q
4 2 Anton Höhne  Germany +0.222
5 1 Mateusz Rudyk  Poland Q
5 2 Nick Wammes  Canada +0.059
6 1 Jeffrey Hoogland  Netherlands Q
6 2 Muhammad Shah Firdaus Sahrom  Malaysia +0.105
7 1 Stefan Bötticher  Germany Q
7 2 Daniel Rochna  Poland +0.921
8 1 Rayan Helal  France Q
8 2 Jair Tjon En Fa  Suriname +0.114

Quarterfinals

The quarterfinals were started on 23 October at 17:52.[6] Matches were raced in a best-of-three format hereon; winners proceeded to the semifinals.

Heat Rank Name Nation Race 1 Race 2 Decider (i.r.) Notes
1 1 Harrie Lavreysen  Netherlands X X Q
1 2 Rayan Helal  France +0.112 +1.482
2 1 Stefan Bötticher  Germany +0.772 X X Q
2 2 Nicholas Paul  Trinidad and Tobago X +0.009 +0.037
3 1 Jeffrey Hoogland  Netherlands +0.001 X X Q
3 2 Mikhail Iakovlev Russian Cycling Federation X +0.155 +0.346
4 1 Sébastien Vigier  France X X Q
4 2 Mateusz Rudyk  Poland +0.101 +0.852

Semifinals

The semifinals were started on 24 October at 13:00.[7] Matches were raced in a best-of-three format hereon; winners proceeded to the final, losers to the bronze medal race.

Heat Rank Name Nation Race 1 Race 2 Decider (i.r.) Notes
1 1 Harrie Lavreysen  Netherlands X X Q
1 2 Sébastien Vigier  France +0.087 +0.248
2 1 Jeffrey Hoogland  Netherlands +2.493 X X Q
2 2 Stefan Bötticher  Germany X +0.096 +0.085

Finals

The finals were started on 24 October at 14:27.[8] Matches were raced in a best-of-three format hereon.

Rank Name Nation Race 1 Race 2 Decider (i.r.)
Gold medal race
1st place, gold medalist(s) Harrie Lavreysen  Netherlands X X
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Jeffrey Hoogland  Netherlands +0.152 +0.178
Bronze medal race
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Sébastien Vigier  France X +0.035 X
4 Stefan Bötticher  Germany REL X +0.044

See also

References

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