2012 UEC European Track Championships

The 2012 European Track Championships was the third edition of the elite European Track Championships in track cycling. It was held on October 19–21, 2012 and took place at the Cido Arena in Panevėžys, Lithuania.[1]

2012 UEC European Track Championships
VenuePanevėžys, Lithuania
Date(s) (2012-10-19 - 2012-10-21)19–21 October 2012
VelodromeCido Arena
Nations participating21
Cyclists participating146
Events13

It was the first European Elite Track Championships that had opening ceremony. The opening ceremony was held on 19 October, an hour before the start of the evening session.

Held some time after the 2012 Summer Olympics, a number of elite European cyclists, notably from Great Britain and France were not in attendance, either through retirement or a rest period. In their absence, the medal table was headed by Germany and the east European track powers; Russia, Belarus and hosts Lithuania.

Schedule

The competition days were split into two Sessions.[2]

Events

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men's Events
Sprint
Denis Dmitriev
 Russia
Max Niederlag
 Germany
Christos Volikakis
 Greece
Team sprint
 Germany
Tobias Wächter
Joachim Eilers
Max Niederlag
44.381  Poland
Kamil Kuczyński
Maciej Bielecki
Krzysztof Maksel
44.892  Great Britain
Matthew Crampton
Callum Skinner
Lewis Oliva
45.081
Keirin
Tobias Wächter
 Germany
Joachim Eilers
 Germany
Denis Dmitriev
 Russia
Omnium
Lucas Liss
 Germany
17 Artur Ershov
 Russia
20 Gediminas Bagdonas
 Lithuania
34
Team pursuit
 Russia
Artur Ershov
Alexei Markov
Alexander Serov
Valery Kaykov
4:00.641  Germany
Lucas Liss
Henning Bommel
Theo Reinhardt
Maximilian Beyer
4:08.654  Italy
Elia Viviani
Michele Scartezzini
Liam Bertazzo
Ignazio Moser
4:06.380
Points race

non-Olympic
Elia Viviani
 Italy
44 Kirill Sveshnikov
 Russia
26 Sergiy Lagkuti
 Ukraine
25
Madison
 Czech Republic
Martin Blaha
Jiři Hochmann
 Russia
Artur Ershov
Valery Kaykov
 Italy
Angelo Ciccone
Elia Viviani
Women's Events
Sprint
Olga Panarina
 Belarus
Anastasiia Voinova
 Russia
Simona Krupeckaitė
 Lithuania
Team sprint
 Lithuania
Simona Krupeckaitė
Gintarė Gaivenytė
33.846  Russia
Anastasiia Voinova
Daria Shmeleva
33.882  France
Sandie Clair
Olivia Montauban
34.975
Keirin
Simona Krupeckaitė
 Lithuania
Ekaterina Gnidenko
 Russia
Elena Brezhniva
 Russia
Omnium
Aušrinė Trebaitė
 Lithuania
Katarzyna Pawłowska
 Poland
Tamara Balabolina
 Russia
Team pursuit
 Lithuania
Aušrinė Trebaitė
Vilija Sereikaitė
Vaida Pikauskaitė
3:25.237 (NR)  Poland
Katarzyna Pawłowska
Eugenia Bujak
Małgorzata Wojtyra
3:27.086  Belarus
Tatsiana Sharakova
Alena Dylko
Aksana Papko
3:24.801
Points race

non-Olympic
Stephanie Pohl
 Germany
33 +1 lap Evgenia Romanyuta
 Russia
25 Elke Gebhardt
 Germany
20
  • shaded events are non-Olympic

Medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Germany4318
2 Lithuania4026
3 Russia27312
4 Italy1023
5 Belarus1012
6 Czech Republic1001
7 Poland0303
8 France0011
 Great Britain0011
 Greece0011
 Ukraine0011
Totals (11 nations)13131339

Participating nations

146 riders from 21 nations will participate.[3][4]

gollark: Infection-based herd immunity is mostly a terrible idea for other reasons, such as tons more people getting it and dying, and massively overloaded hospitals.
gollark: Which is surely even *more* ridiculously rare than being infected twice.
gollark: I mean, yes some governments are being terrible about COVID-19 in general, that doesn't mean there's any issue with the vaccines.
gollark: I see. That seems like a stretch.
gollark: IIRC they didn't even claim it had actually gone through sufficient trials, just that they had one and were using it.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.