2014 UCI Road World Championships – Men's road race

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Men's road race
2014 UCI Road World Championships
Jersey rainbow.svg
Rainbow jersey
Race details
Date 28 September 2014
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Winning time 6h 29' 07"[1]
Medalists
 Gold  Michał Kwiatkowski (POL)
 Silver  Simon Gerrans (AUS)
 Bronze  Alejandro Valverde (ESP)
2013
2015
2014 UCI Road World Championships
Cycling (road) pictogram.svg
Participating nations
Elite events
List of elite cyclists
Elite road race   men   women
Elite time trial   men   women
Elite team time trial   men   women
Under-23 events
List of under-23 cyclists
Under-23 road race   men  
Under-23 time trial   men  
Junior events
List of junior cyclists
Junior road race   men   women
Junior time trial   men   women
 
Qualification

The Men's road race of the 2014 UCI Road World Championships was a cycling event that took place on 28 September 2014 in Ponferrada, Spain. It was the 81st edition of the championship, and Portugal's Rui Costa was the defending champion.

After attacking with around 6 km (3.7 mi) remaining, Poland's Michał Kwiatkowski held off the rest of the field to become his country's first world road race champion.[2] Kwiatkowski held on by a second to beat Australia's Simon Gerrans, while Spain's Alejandro Valverde finished in third place for the third successive world championships.[3]

Qualification

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Qualification was based on performances on the UCI run tours during 2014. Results from January to the middle of August counted towards the qualification criteria on both the 2014 UCI World Tour and the UCI Continental Circuits across the world, with the rankings being determined upon the release of the numerous tour rankings on 15 August 2014.[4]

The following 48 nations qualified.[5]

Number of riders Nations
14 to enter, 9 to start  Australia,  Belgium,  Colombia,  France,  Germany,  Great Britain,  Italy,  Netherlands,  Poland,  Spain
9 to enter, 6 to start  Austria,  Denmark,  Iran,  Morocco,  Portugal,  Russia,  Slovenia,  Ukraine,  United States,  Venezuela
5 to enter, 3 to start  Algeria,  Argentina,  Belarus,  Brazil,  Canada,  Costa Rica,  Croatia,  Czech Republic,  Eritrea,  Estonia,  Ireland,  Japan,  Kazakhstan,  Latvia,  Lithuania,  Luxembourg,  New Zealand,  Norway,  Romania,  Slovakia,  South Africa,  South Korea,   Switzerland
2 to enter, 1 to start  Bulgaria,  Ecuador,  Greece,  Serbia,  Sweden

Course

The race was held on the same circuit as the other road races and consisted of 14 laps. The circuit was 18.20 km (11.31 mi) long and included two hills. The total climbing was 306 m (1,004 ft) per lap and the maximum incline was 10.7%.[6]

The first 4 km (2.5 mi) were flat, after which the climb to Alto de Montearenas started, with an average gradient of 8%. After a few hundred metres the ascent flattened and the remaining 5.1 km (3.2 mi) were at an average gradient of 3.5%. Next was a descent, with the steepest point after 11 km (6.8 mi) at a 16% negative gradient.

The Alto de Compostilla was a short climb of 1.1 km (0.68 mi), at an average gradient is 6.5% with some of the steepest parts at 11%. The remaining distance of 4.5 km (2.8 mi) was downhill thereafter, prior to the finish in Ponferrada.

Schedule

All times are in Central European Time (UTC+1).[7]

Date Time Event
28 September 2014 10:00–16:35 Men's road race
28 September 2014 16:55 Victory ceremony

Participating nations

204 cyclists from 44 nations started the men's road race. The numbers of cyclists per nation are shown in parentheses.[8]

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Prize money

The UCI assigned premiums for the top 3 finishers, with a total prize money of 16,101.[9]

Position 1st 2nd 3rd Total
Amount[9] €7,667 €5,367 €3,067 €16,101

Results

Final classification

Of the race's 204 entrants, 95 riders completed the full distance of 254.8 km (158.3 mi).[1]

Riders who failed to finish

109 riders failed to finish the race.[1]

References

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External links