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Cycling At The 2004 Summer Olympics - Individual Pursuit Women





RECORDS


Ulmer held the world record coming into this event, which she set at the world championships in Melbourne in May 2004. She reduced the world record by more than 6 seconds during this event. All three of the medallists in Athens beat the previous world record.


RESULTS


WR denotes world record

Q denotes qualification for next round


Qualifying round

The riders raced against each other in matches of two. Qualification for the next round was not based on who won those matches, however. The cyclists with the eight fastest times advanced, regardless of whether they won or lost their match. This resulted in the first two heats not having any riders advance while the next four heats each had both winners and losers advance.








First round

In the first round of actual match competition, cyclists were seeded into matches based on their times from the qualifying round. The fastest cyclist faced the eighth-fastest, the second-fastest faced the third, and so forth. Winners advanced to the finals while losers in each match received a final ranking based on their time in the round.

  • Heat 1:

  • # Katherine Bates, Australia, 3:34.743 Q - 4th

  • # Elena Chalykh, Russia, 3:36.442 (7th place)


  • Heat 2:

  • # Leontien Ziljaard-van Moorsel, Netherlands, 3:28.747 Q - 3rd

  • # Karin Thuerig, Switzerland, 3:34.831 (5th place)


  • Heat 3:

  • # Katie MacTier, Australia 3:28.095 Q - 2nd

  • # Emma Davies, Great Britain, Overlapped (8th place)


  • Heat 4:

  • # Sarah Ulmer, New Zealand, 3:27.444 Q - 1st

  • # Olga Slyusareva, Russia, 3:36.263 (6th place)



Finals

In the women's individual pursuit finals, the current world champion and world record holder, Sarah Ulmer from New Zealand, set a new world record in the final for a time of 3:24.537 for the gold medal. It is the first time New Zealand has ever won a cycling gold medal. The Australian, Katie MacTier (3:27.650), set a very fast first 1000 m of 1:10.618, with a lead of one second, but Ulmer reversed this lead in the second 1000 m, and went on to win the pursuit by 3 seconds. Netherlands rider and former world champion, Leontien Ziljaard-van Moorsel rode a time of 3:27.037 for the bronze defeating Australian, Katherine Bates (3:31.715)

  • Bronze medal match

  • # Leontien Ziljaard-van Moorsel, Netherlands, 3:27.037

  • # Katherine Bates, Australia, 3:31.715


  • Gold medal match

  • # Sarah Ulmer, New Zealand, 3:24.537 WR

  • # Katie MacTier, Australia, 3:27.650



FINAL CLASSIFICATION

#Sarah Ulmer, New Zealand
#Katie MacTier, Australia
#Leontien Zilijaard-van Moorsel, Netherlands
#Katherine Bates, Australia
#Karin Theurig, Switzerland
#Olga Slyusareva, Russia
#Elena Chalykh, Russia
#Emma Davies, Great Britain
#Maria Luisa Calle Williams, Colombia
#Erin Mirabella, United States
#Lenka Valova, Czech Republic
#Evelyn Garcia, El Salvador