2008 UCI Road World Championships – Men's road race

Men's Individual Road Race
2008 UCI Road World Championships
Race details
Date September 29, 2008
Distance 260.25 km (161.7 mi)
Winning time 06h 37' 30" (39.3962 km/h/24.4797 mph)
Medalists
 Gold  Alessandro Ballan (ITA) (Italy)
 Silver  Damiano Cunego (ITA) (Italy)
 Bronze  Matti Breschel (DEN) (Denmark)
2007
2009

The Men's Individual Road Race of the 2008 UCI Road World Championships cycling event took place on September 28 in Varese, Italy. The course comprised 15 laps around 17.35-kilometre route, making a total distance of 260.25 km. Each lap featured two ascents: the first at Montello (6.5% gradient for 1.15 kilometres); and the second at Ronchi (4.5% for 3.13 kilometres).[1] The highest elevation measured 480 metres (1,570 ft) at Via Montello.[2]

Pre-race favourites included Paolo Bettini, who was trying for an unprecedented third consecutive title, and the 1999, 2001 and 2004 champion Oscar Freire.[3]

The race was won by Alessandro Ballan, with his fellow Italian Damiano Cunego in second and Matti Breschel of Denmark taking the bronze medal.[4]

Contents

Top ten finishers

Cyclist Country Time
1 Alessandro Ballan  Italy 06h 37'30"
2 Damiano Cunego  Italy at 3"
3 Matti Breschel  Denmark s.t.
4 Davide Rebellin  Italy s.t.
5 Andriy Grivko  Ukraine s.t.
6 Joaquín Rodríguez  Spain s.t.
7 Fabian Wegmann  Germany s.t.
8 Christian Pfannberger  Austria s.t.
9 Nick Nuyens  Belgium s.t.
10 Robert Gesink  Netherlands s.t.

Nation qualification

14 to be enrolled, 9 to start
 Spain
 Italy
 Belgium
 Germany
 Luxembourg
 Australia
 France
 Switzerland
 Russia
 Netherlands
9 to be enrolled, 6 to start
 South Africa
 United States
 Venezuela
 Iran
 Slovenia
 Poland
 Ukraine
 United Kingdom
 Portugal
 Denmark
5 to be enrolled, 3 to start
 Tunisia
 Argentina
 Colombia
 Canada
 Japan
 Uzbekistan
 Austria
 Sweden
 Croatia
 Ireland
 Hungary
 Bulgaria
 Slovakia
 Latvia
 Serbia
 Estonia
 New Zealand
 Czech Republic
 Finland
 Norway
 Kazakhstan
2 to be enrolled, 1 to start
 Morocco
 Cuba
 Costa Rica
 Ecuador
 Mexico
 Uruguay
 Belarus
 Sri Lanka
 Lithuania

References

External links