Cycling at the 2019 Pan American Games – Men's sprint

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Men's sprint at the 2019 Pan American Games
VenueVelodrome
DatesAugust 2–3
Competitors17 from 10 nations
Medalists
Gold medal 
Silver medal 
Bronze medal 
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The men's sprint competition of the cycling events at the 2019 Pan American Games was held on August 2 and August 3 at the Velodrome.[1]

Njisane Phillip of Trinidad and Tobago originally won the silver medal, but was disqualified for doping. [2]

Records[edit]

Prior to this competition, the existing world and Games records were as follows:

World record  Francois Pervis (FRA) 9.347 Aguascalientes, Mexico 6 December 2013
Games record  Njisane Phillip (TTO) 9.977 Guadalajara, Mexico 18 October 2011

Schedule[edit]

Date Time Round
August 2, 2019 11:05 Qualification
August 2, 2019 11:42 Eighth-finals
August 2, 2019 12:00 Repechage
August 2, 2019 18:05 Quarterfinals
August 2, 2019 19:29 Race For 5th-8th Places
August 3, 2019 12:11 Semifinals
August 3, 2019 18:57 Finals

Results[edit]

Qualification[edit]

Fastest 12 riders continue to the eighth-finals. [3]

Rank Name Nation Time Notes
1 Nicholas Paul  Trinidad and Tobago 9.808 Q, PR
2 Njisane Phillip  Trinidad and Tobago 10.087 Q
3 Nick Wammes  Canada 10.100 Q
4 Kevin Quintero  Colombia 10.104 Q
5 Jair Tjon En Fa  Suriname 10.166 Q
6 Hersony Canelón  Venezuela 10.196 Q
7 Kacio Fonseca  Brazil 10.226 Q
8 Brandon Pineda  Guatemala 10.261 Q
9 Santiago Ramírez  Colombia 10.281 Q
10 Leandro Bottasso  Argentina 10.308 Q
11 César Marcano  Venezuela 10.364 Q
12 Joel Archambault  Canada 10.380 Q
13 Flávio Cipriano  Brazil 10.546
14 Manuel Resendez  Mexico 10.549
15 Juan Carlos Ruiz Terán  Mexico 10.727
16 Francis Cachique  Peru 11.697
17 Robinson Ruiz  Peru 12.052

Eighth-finals[edit]

The winners of each advance to the quarterfinals, while the losers advance to the repechage[4]

Heat Rank Name Nation Time Notes
1 1 Nicholas Paul  Trinidad and Tobago 10.482 Q
1 2 Joel Archambault  Canada
2 1 Njisane Phillip  Trinidad and Tobago 10.824 Q
2 2 César Marcano  Venezuela
3 1 Leandro Bottasso  Argentina 10.910 Q
3 2 Nick Wammes  Canada
4 1 Kevin Quintero  Colombia 10.609 Q
4 2 Santiago Ramírez  Colombia
5 1 Jair Tjon En Fa  Suriname 10.994 Q
5 2 Brandon Pineda  Guatemala
6 1 Hersony Canelón  Venezuela 10.563 Q
6 2 Kacio Fonseca  Brazil

Repechage[edit]

The winner of each advanced to the quarterfinals.[5]

Heat Rank Name Nation Time Notes
1 1 Santiago Ramírez  Colombia 10.635 Q
1 2 Joel Archambault  Canada
1 3 Brandon Pineda  Guatemala
2 1 Kacio Fonseca  Brazil 10.875 Q
2 2 Nick Wammes  Canada
2 3 César Marcano  Venezuela

Quarterfinals[edit]

The winner of each advanced to the semifinals.[6]

Heat Rank Name Nation Race 1 Race 2 Decide Notes
1 1 Nicholas Paul  Trinidad and Tobago 10.657 10.355 Q
1 2 Kacio Fonseca  Brazil
2 1 Njisane Phillip  Trinidad and Tobago 10.492 10.324 Q
2 2 Santiago Ramírez  Colombia
3 1 Hersony Canelón  Venezuela 10.904 10.731 Q
3 2 Leandro Bottasso  Argentina
4 1 Kevin Quintero  Colombia 10.519 10.453 Q
4 2 Jair Tjon En Fa  Suriname

Race for 5th–8th Places[edit]

[7]

Rank Name Nation Time Notes
DSQ[8] Kacio Fonseca  Brazil 10.649
6 Jair Tjon En Fa  Suriname
7 Santiago Ramírez  Colombia
8 Leandro Bottasso  Argentina

Semifinals[edit]

The winner of each advanced to the final.[9]

Heat Rank Name Nation Race 1 Race 2 Decide Notes
1 1 Nicholas Paul  Trinidad and Tobago 10.432 REL 10.472 Q
1 2 Kevin Quintero  Colombia 10.256
2 1 Njisane Phillip  Trinidad and Tobago 10.313 10.318 Q
2 2 Hersony Canelón  Venezuela

Finals[edit]

The final classification is determined in the medal finals.[10]

Rank Name Nation Race 1 Race 2 Decide Notes
Gold medal final
1st place, gold medalist(s) Nicholas Paul  Trinidad and Tobago 10.645 10.936
DSQ[2] Njisane Phillip  Trinidad and Tobago
Bronze medal final
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Kevin Quintero  Colombia 10.466 10.556
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Hersony Canelón  Venezuela

References[edit]

  1. ^ Men's sprint
  2. ^ a b "PANAMSPORTS PRESS RELEASE". www.copaci.org. Confederación Panamericana de Ciclismo. 11 September 2020. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  3. ^ Qualification results
  4. ^ Eighth-finals results
  5. ^ Repechage results
  6. ^ Quarterfinals results
  7. ^ Race for 5th–8th Places results
  8. ^ "COMMUNIQUE OF THE BRAZILIAN CYCLING CONFEDERATION". www.copaci.org. Confederación Panamericana de Ciclismo. 3 October 2019. Retrieved 2 July 2021.
  9. ^ Semifinals results
  10. ^ Finals results