Jump to content

List of Olympic medalists in cycling (men)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is the complete list of men's Olympic medalists in cycling.

Current program

[edit]

With three gold medals on the road, the most successful Olympic road cyclist is Viatcheslav Ekimov of Russia and the Soviet Union (Ekimov had a fourth gold on the track). Only one rider has won gold in both the road race and the road time trial at the same Olympic Games; Remco Evenepoel of Belgium in Paris 2024.

The Olympic road race, one of the most iconic events at the Games, is also one with the most turnover in medals. No rider has ever won two gold medals, and only one rider has won two medals; Alexander Vinokourov of Kazakhstan, with a gold medal in London 2012, following a silver medal in Sydney 2000. Until 1992 and the Games in Barcelona, all riders were amateurs, with professionals not allowed to ride. Since 1992, the event has been dominated by the same professionals, with a list of famous winners. Unusually, the Games road race continues to be held without rider radios that are used at all times in the professional tours. This creates less predictable racing than the professional circuit.

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1896 Athens
details
Aristidis Konstantinidis
 Greece
August von Gödrich
 Germany
Edward Battell
 Great Britain
1900–1932 not included in the Olympic program
1936 Berlin
details
Robert Charpentier
 France
Guy Lapébie
 France
Ernst Nievergelt
 Switzerland
1948 London
details
José Beyaert
 France
Gerrit Voorting
 Netherlands
Lode Wouters
 Belgium
1952 Helsinki
details
André Noyelle
 Belgium
Robert Grondelaers
 Belgium
Edi Ziegler
 Germany
1956 Melbourne
details
Ercole Baldini
 Italy
Arnaud Geyre
 France
Alan Jackson
 Great Britain
1960 Rome
details
Viktor Kapitonov
 Soviet Union
Livio Trapè
 Italy
Willy van den Berghen
 Belgium
1964 Tokyo
details
Mario Zanin
 Italy
Kjell Rodian
 Denmark
Walter Godefroot
 Belgium
1968 Mexico City
details
Pierfranco Vianelli
 Italy
Leif Mortensen
 Denmark
Gösta Pettersson
 Sweden
1972 Munich
details
Hennie Kuiper
 Netherlands
Clyde Sefton
 Australia
None awarded
1976 Montreal
details
Bernt Johansson
 Sweden
Giuseppe Martinelli
 Italy
Mieczysław Nowicki
 Poland
1980 Moscow
details
Sergei Sukhoruchenkov
 Soviet Union
Czesław Lang
 Poland
Yuri Barinov
 Soviet Union
1984 Los Angeles
details
Alexi Grewal
 United States
Steve Bauer
 Canada
Dag Otto Lauritzen
 Norway
1988 Seoul
details
Olaf Ludwig
 East Germany
Bernd Gröne
 West Germany
Christian Henn
 West Germany
1992 Barcelona
details
Fabio Casartelli
 Italy
Erik Dekker
 Netherlands
Dainis Ozols
 Latvia
1996 Atlanta
details
Pascal Richard
 Switzerland
Rolf Sørensen
 Denmark
Max Sciandri
 Great Britain
2000 Sydney
details
Jan Ullrich
 Germany
Alexander Vinokourov
 Kazakhstan
Andreas Klöden
 Germany
2004 Athens
details
Paolo Bettini
 Italy
Sérgio Paulinho
 Portugal
Axel Merckx
 Belgium
2008 Beijing
details
Samuel Sánchez
 Spain
Fabian Cancellara
 Switzerland
Alexandr Kolobnev
 Russia
2012 London
details
Alexander Vinokourov
 Kazakhstan
Rigoberto Urán
 Colombia
Alexander Kristoff
 Norway
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
Greg Van Avermaet
 Belgium
Jakob Fuglsang
 Denmark
Rafał Majka
 Poland
2020 Tokyo
details
Richard Carapaz
 Ecuador
Wout Van Aert
 Belgium
Tadej Pogačar
 Slovenia
2024 Paris
details
Remco Evenepoel
 Belgium
Valentin Madouas
 France
Christophe Laporte
 France

Two riders have won a pair of gold medals in the time trial. Viatcheslav Ekimov, representing Russia and Fabian Cancellara for Switzerland. Tom Dumoulin of the Netherlands, and Chris Froome of Great Britain have also won two medals each, though neither of them gold. Bradley Wiggins in 2012, is the only rider to win time trial gold, or any Olympic road racing gold, in the same year - and in this case the same month - as winning the maillot jeune of the Tour de France.

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1912 Stockholm
details
Rudolph Lewis
 South Africa
Frederick Grubb
 Great Britain
Carl Schutte
 United States
1920 Antwerp
details
Harry Stenqvist
 Sweden
Henry Kaltenbrunn
 South Africa
Fernand Canteloube
 France
1924 Paris
details
Armand Blanchonnet
 France
Henri Hoevenaers
 Belgium
René Hamel
 France
1928 Amsterdam
details
Henry Hansen
 Denmark
Frank Southall
 Great Britain
Gösta Carlsson
 Sweden
1932 Los Angeles
details
Attilio Pavesi
 Italy
Guglielmo Segato
 Italy
Bernhard Britz
 Sweden
1936–1992 not included in the Olympic program
1996 Atlanta
details
Miguel Induráin
 Spain
Abraham Olano
 Spain
Chris Boardman
 Great Britain
2000 Sydney
details
Viatcheslav Ekimov
 Russia
Jan Ullrich
 Germany
None awarded[1]
2004 Athens
details
Viatcheslav Ekimov
 Russia
Bobby Julich
 United States
Michael Rogers
 Australia
2008 Beijing
details
Fabian Cancellara
 Switzerland
Gustav Larsson
 Sweden
Levi Leipheimer
 United States
2012 London
details
Bradley Wiggins
 Great Britain
Tony Martin
 Germany
Chris Froome
 Great Britain
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
Fabian Cancellara
 Switzerland
Tom Dumoulin
 Netherlands
Chris Froome
 Great Britain
2020 Tokyo
details
Primož Roglič
 Slovenia
Tom Dumoulin
 Netherlands
Rohan Dennis
 Australia
2024 Paris
details
Remco Evenepoel
 Belgium
Filippo Ganna
 Italy
Wout van Aert
 Belgium
Games Gold Silver Bronze
2000 Sydney
details
Florian Rousseau
 France
Gary Neiwand
 Australia
Jens Fiedler
 Germany
2004 Athens
details
Ryan Bayley
 Australia
José Antonio Escuredo
 Spain
Shane Kelly
 Australia
2008 Beijing
details
Chris Hoy
 Great Britain
Ross Edgar
 Great Britain
Kiyofumi Nagai
 Japan
2012 London
details
Chris Hoy
 Great Britain
Maximilian Levy
 Germany
Simon van Velthooven
 New Zealand
Teun Mulder
 Netherlands
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
Jason Kenny
 Great Britain
Matthijs Büchli
 Netherlands
Azizulhasni Awang
 Malaysia
2020 Tokyo
details
Jason Kenny
 Great Britain
Azizulhasni Awang
 Malaysia
Harrie Lavreysen
 Netherlands
2024 Paris
details
Harrie Lavreysen
 Netherlands
Matthew Richardson
 Australia
Matthew Glaetzer
 Australia
Games Gold Silver Bronze
2000 Sydney
details
 Brett Aitken
and Scott McGrory (AUS)
 Etienne De Wilde
and Matthew Gilmore (BEL)
 Silvio Martinello
and Marco Villa (ITA)
2004 Athens
details
 Graeme Brown
and Stuart O'Grady (AUS)
 Franco Marvulli
and Bruno Risi (SUI)
 Rob Hayles
and Bradley Wiggins (GBR)
2008 Beijing
details
 Juan Curuchet
and Walter Pérez (ARG)
 Joan Llaneras
and Antonio Tauler (ESP)
 Mikhail Ignatiev
and Alexei Markov (RUS)
2012–2016 not included in the Olympic program
2020 Tokyo
details
 Lasse Norman Hansen
and Michael Mørkøv (DEN)
 Ethan Hayter
and Matthew Walls (GBR)
 Donavan Grondin
and Benjamin Thomas (FRA)
2024 Paris
details
 Iúri Leitão
and Rui Oliveira (POR)
 Simone Consonni
and Elia Viviani (ITA)
 Niklas Larsen
and Michael Mørkøv (DEN)
Games Gold Silver Bronze
2012 London
details
Lasse Norman Hansen
 Denmark
Bryan Coquard
 France
Ed Clancy
 Great Britain
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
Elia Viviani
 Italy
Mark Cavendish
 Great Britain
Lasse Norman Hansen
 Denmark
2020 Tokyo
details
Matthew Walls
 Great Britain
Campbell Stewart
 New Zealand
Elia Viviani
 Italy
2024 Paris
details
Benjamin Thomas
 France
Iúri Leitão
 Portugal
Fabio Van den Bossche
 Belgium
Games Gold Silver Bronze
1908 London
details
 Great Britain (GBR)
Benjamin Jones
Clarence Kingsbury
Leonard Meredith
Ernest Payne
 Germany (GER)
Max Götze
Rudolf Katzer
Hermann Martens
Karl Neumer
 Canada (CAN)
William Anderson
Walter Andrews
Frederick McCarthy
William Morton
1912 Stockholm not included in the Olympic program
1920 Antwerp
details
 Italy (ITA)
Arnaldo Carli
Ruggero Ferrario
Franco Giorgetti
Primo Magnani
 Great Britain (GBR)
Cyril Alden
Horace Johnson
William Stewart
Albert White
 South Africa (RSA)
Harry Goosen
Henry Kaltenbrun
William Smith
James Walker
1924 Paris
details
 Italy (ITA)
Angelo de Martino
Alfredo Dinale
Aurelio Menegazzi
Francesco Zucchetti
 Poland (POL)
Józef Lange
Jan Lazarski
Tomasz Stankiewicz
Franciszek Szymczyk
 Belgium (BEL)
Jean Van Den Bosch
Léonard Daghelinckx
Henri Hoevenaers
Ferdinand Saive
1928 Amsterdam
details
 Italy (ITA)
Giacomo Gaioni
Cesare Facciani
Mario Lusiani
Luigi Tasselli
 Netherlands (NED)
Janus Braspennincx
Piet van der Horst
Johannes Maas
Jan Pijnenburg
 Great Britain (GBR)
George Southall
Harry Wyld
Leonard Wyld
Percy Wyld
1932 Los Angeles
details
 Italy (ITA)
Nino Borsari
Marco Cimatti
Alberto Ghilardi
Paolo Pedretti
 France (FRA)
Paul Chocque
Amédée Fournier
René Legrèves
Henri Mouillefarine
 Great Britain (GBR)
William Harvell
Charles Holland
Ernest Johnson
Frank Southall
1936 Berlin
details
 France (FRA)
Robert Charpentier
Jean Goujon
Guy Lapébie
Roger-Jean Le Nizerhy
 Italy (ITA)
Bianco Bianchi
Mario Gentili
Armando Latini
Severino Rigoni
 Great Britain (GBR)
Harry Hill
Ernest Johnson
Charles King
Ernest Mills
1948 London
details
 France (FRA)
Pierre Adam
Serge Blusson
Charles Coste
Fernand Decanali
 Italy (ITA)
Arnaldo Benfenati
Guido Bernardi
Anselmo Citterio
Rino Pucci
 Great Britain (GBR)
Robert Geldard
Tommy Godwin
David Ricketts
Wilfred Waters
1952 Helsinki
details
 Italy (ITA)
Loris Campana
Mino De Rossi
Guido Messina
Marino Morettini
 South Africa (RSA)
George Estman
Robert Fowler
Thomas Shardelow
Alfred Swift
 Great Britain (GBR)
Donald Burgess
George Newberry
Alan Newton
Ronald Stretton
1956 Melbourne
details
 Italy (ITA)
Antonio Domenicali
Leandro Faggin
Franco Gandini
Valentino Gasparella
Virginio Pizzali
 France (FRA)
René Bianchi
Jean Graczyk
Jean-Claude Lecante
Michel Vermeulin
 Great Britain (GBR)
Donald Burgess
Michael Gambrill
John Geddes
Tom Simpson
1960 Rome
details
 Italy (ITA)
Luigi Arienti
Franco Testa
Mario Vallotto
Marino Vigna
 United Team of Germany (EUA)
Bernd Barleben
Peter Gröning
Manfred Klieme
Siegfried Köhler
 Soviet Union (URS)
Arnold Belgardt
Leonid Kolumbet
Stanislav Moskvin
Viktor Romanov
1964 Tokyo
details
 United Team of Germany (EUA)
Lothar Claesges
Karl-Heinz Henrichs
Karl Link
Ernst Streng
 Italy (ITA)
Vincenzo Mantovani
Carlo Rancati
Luigi Roncaglia
Franco Testa
 Netherlands (NED)
Henk Cornelisse
Gerard Koel
Jaap Oudkerk
Cor Schuuring
1968 Mexico City
details
 Denmark (DEN)
Gunnar Asmussen
Mogens Jensen
Per Lyngemark
Reno Olsen
 West Germany (FRG)
Udo Hempel
Karl-Heinz Henrichs
Jürgen Kissner
Karl Link
 Italy (ITA)
Lorenzo Bosisio
Cipriano Chemello
Giorgio Morbiato
Luigi Roncaglia
1972 Munich
details
 West Germany (FRG)
Günther Schumacher
Jürgen Colombo
Günter Haritz
Udo Hempel
 East Germany (GDR)
Uwe Unterwalder
Thomas Huschke
Heinz Richter
Herbert Richter
 Great Britain (GBR)
William Moore
Michael Bennett
Ian Hallam
Ronald Keeble
1976 Montreal
details
 West Germany (FRG)
Peter Vonhof
Gregor Braun
Hans Lutz
Günther Schumacher
 Soviet Union (URS)
Viktor Sokolov
Vladimir Osokin
Aleksandr Perov
Vitaly Petrakov
 Great Britain (GBR)
Ian Hallam
Ian Banbury
Michael Bennett
Robin Croker
1980 Moscow
details
 Soviet Union (URS)
Viktor Manakov
Valery Movchan
Vladimir Osokin
Vitaly Petrakov
Aleksandr Krasnov
 East Germany (GDR)
Gerald Mortag
Uwe Unterwalder
Matthias Wiegand
Volker Winkler
 Czechoslovakia (TCH)
Teodor Černý
Martin Penc
Jiří Pokorný
lgor Sláma
1984 Los Angeles
details
 Australia (AUS)
Michael Grenda
Kevin Nichols
Michael Turtur
Dean Woods
 United States (USA)
David Grylls
Steve Hegg
Patrick McDonough
Leonard Nitz
 West Germany (FRG)
Reinhard Alber
Rolf Gölz
Roland Günther
Michael Marx
1988 Seoul
details
 Soviet Union (URS)
Viatcheslav Ekimov
Artūras Kasputis
Dmitry Nelyubin
Gintautas Umaras
 
 East Germany (GDR)
Carsten Wolf
Steffen Blochwitz
Roland Hennig
Dirk Meier
 
 Australia (AUS)
Scott McGrory
Dean Woods
Brett Dutton
Wayne McCarny
Stephen McGlede
1992 Barcelona
details
 Germany (GER)
Stefan Steinweg
Andreas Walzer
Guido Fulst
Michael Glöckner
Jens Lehmann
 Australia (AUS)
Stuart O'Grady
Brett Aitken
Stephen McGlede
Shaun O'Brien
 
 Denmark (DEN)
Jan Petersen
Michael Sandstød
Ken Frost
Jimmi Madsen
Klaus Kynde Nielsen
1996 Atlanta
details
 France (FRA)
Christophe Capelle
Philippe Ermenault
Jean-Michel Monin
Francis Moreau
 Russia (RUS)
Eduard Gritsun
Nikolay Kuznetsov
Alexei Markov
Anton Shantyr
 Australia (AUS)
Brett Aitken
Stuart O'Grady
Timothy O'Shannessey
Dean Woods
2000 Sydney
details
 Germany (GER)
Guido Fulst
Robert Bartko
Daniel Becke
Jens Lehmann
 Ukraine (UKR)
Sergiy Chernyavsky
Sergiy Matveyev
Alexander Symonenko
Oleksandr Fedenko
 Great Britain (GBR)
Paul Manning
Chris Newton
Bryan Steel
Bradley Wiggins
2004 Athens
details
 Australia (AUS)
Graeme Brown
Brett Lancaster
Bradley McGee
Luke Roberts
 Great Britain (GBR)
Steve Cummings
Rob Hayles
Paul Manning
Bradley Wiggins
 Spain (ESP)
Carlos Castaño
Sergi Escobar
Asier Maeztu
Carlos Torrent
2008 Beijing
details
 Great Britain (GBR)
Ed Clancy
Paul Manning
Geraint Thomas
Bradley Wiggins
 
 Denmark (DEN)
Casper Jørgensen
Jens-Erik Madsen
Michael Mørkøv
Alex Nicki Rasmussen
Michael Færk Christensen
 New Zealand (NZL)
Sam Bewley
Hayden Roulston
Marc Ryan
Jesse Sergent
Westley Gough
2012 London
details
 Great Britain (GBR)
Ed Clancy
Geraint Thomas
Steven Burke
Peter Kennaugh
 
 Australia (AUS)
Jack Bobridge
Glenn O'Shea
Rohan Dennis
Michael Hepburn
 
 New Zealand (NZL)
Sam Bewley
Aaron Gate
Marc Ryan
Jesse Sergent
Westley Gough
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
 Great Britain (GBR)
Ed Clancy
Steven Burke
Owain Doull
Bradley Wiggins
 Australia (AUS)
Alexander Edmondson
Jack Bobridge
Michael Hepburn
Sam Welsford
 Denmark (DEN)
Lasse Norman Hansen
Niklas Larsen
Frederik Madsen
Casper von Folsach
2020 Tokyo
details
 Italy (ITA)
Simone Consonni
Filippo Ganna
Francesco Lamon
Jonathan Milan
 Denmark (DEN)
Lasse Norman Hansen
Niklas Larsen
Frederik Rodenberg
Rasmus Pedersen
 Australia (AUS)
Kelland O'Brien
Sam Welsford
Leigh Howard
Luke Plapp
2024 Paris
details
 Australia (AUS)
Oliver Bleddyn
Sam Welsford
Conor Leahy
Kelland O'Brien
 Great Britain (GBR)
Ethan Hayter
Daniel Bigham
Charlie Tanfield
Ethan Vernon
 Italy (ITA)
Simone Consonni
Filippo Ganna
Francesco Lamon
Jonathan Milan
Games Gold Silver Bronze
1896 Athens
details
Paul Masson
 France
Stamatios Nikolopoulos
 Greece
Léon Flameng
 France
1900 Paris
details
Albert Taillandier
 France
Fernand Sanz
 France
John Henry Lake
 United States
1904 St. Louis not included in the Olympic program
1908 London
details
No medalists: final declared void as time limit was exceeded
1912 Stockholm not included in the Olympic program
1920 Antwerp
details
Maurice Peeters
 Netherlands
Horace Johnson
 Great Britain
Harry Ryan
 Great Britain
1924 Paris
details
Lucien Michard
 France
Jacob Meijer
 Netherlands
Jean Cugnot
 France
1928 Amsterdam
details
Roger Beaufrand
 France
Antoine Mazairac
 Netherlands
Willy Hansen
 Denmark
1932 Los Angeles
details
Jacobus van Egmond
 Netherlands
Louis Chaillot
 France
Bruno Pellizzari
 Italy
1936 Berlin
details
Toni Merkens
 Germany
Arie van Vliet
 Netherlands
Louis Chaillot
 France
1948 London
details
Mario Ghella
 Italy
Reg Harris
 Great Britain
Axel Schandorff
 Denmark
1952 Helsinki
details
Enzo Sacchi
 Italy
Lionel Cox
 Australia
Werner Potzernheim
 Germany
1956 Melbourne
details
Michel Rousseau
 France
Guglielmo Presenti
 Italy
Dick Ploog
 Australia
1960 Rome
details
Sante Gaiardoni
 Italy
Leo Sterckx
 Belgium
Valentino Gasarella
 Italy
1964 Tokyo
details
Giovanni Pettenella
 Italy
Sergio Bianchetto
 Italy
Daniel Morelon
 France
1968 Mexico City
details
Daniel Morelon
 France
Giordano Turrini
 Italy
Pierre Trentin
 France
1972 Munich
details
Daniel Morelon
 France
John Nicholson
 Australia
Omar Pkhakadze
 Soviet Union
1976 Montreal
details
Anton Tkáč
 Czechoslovakia
Daniel Morelon
 France
Hens-Jurgen Geschke
 East Germany
1980 Moscow
details
Lutz Heßlich
 East Germany
Yave Cahard
 France
Sergei Kopylov
 Soviet Union
1984 Los Angeles
details
Mark Gorski
 United States
Nelson Vails
 United States
Tsutomu Sakamoto
 Japan
1988 Seoul
details
Lutz Heßlich
 East Germany
Nikolai Kovsh
 Soviet Union
Gary Neiwand
 Australia
1992 Barcelona
details
Jens Fiedler
 Germany
Gary Neiwand
 Australia
Curt Harnett
 Canada
1996 Atlanta
details
Jens Fiedler
 Germany
Marty Nothstein
 United States
Curt Harnett
 Canada
2000 Sydney
details
Marty Nothstein
 United States
Florian Rousseau
 France
Jens Fiedler
 Germany
2004 Athens
details
Ryan Bayley
 Australia
Theo Bos
 Netherlands
René Wolff
 Germany
2008 Beijing
details
Chris Hoy
 Great Britain
Jason Kenny
 Great Britain
Mickaël Bourgain
 France
2012 London
details
Jason Kenny
 Great Britain
Grégory Baugé
 France
Shane Perkins
 Australia
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
Jason Kenny
 Great Britain
Callum Skinner
 Great Britain
Denis Dmitriev
 Russia
2020 Tokyo
details
Harrie Lavreysen
 Netherlands
Jeffrey Hoogland
 Netherlands
Jack Carlin
 Great Britain
2024 Paris
details
Harrie Lavreysen
 Netherlands
Matthew Richardson
 Australia
Jack Carlin
 Great Britain

Introduced in the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia, the team sprint is effectively a 750-metre team time trial, with a rider peeling off at the end of each lap. since its introduction, the event has been dominated by Great Britain, with three wins from the six occasions on which the event was held, and two silver medals. Jason Kenny holds the record of three gold and one silver medal in the event, having been a part of the winning team on three consecutive occasions between 2008 and 2016. France, the first winners of the event in Sydney, were the only nation to have won a medal in every edition, with 1 gold, 2 silvers and 3 bronze medals, but failed to maintain that record, ironically, in their home Games od 2024.

Netherlands hold the Olympic record in the event of 41.469 seconds, set in the delayed Tokyo Olympic Games of 2020. They also hold the distinction of being the only team to win the event twice with the same three riders; Roy van den Berg, Harrie Lavreysen and Jeffrey Hoogland. Great Britain's three triumphs came with three different teams of which Jason Kenny was the only ever-present.

Games Gold Silver Bronze
2000 Sydney
details
 France (FRA)
Florian Rousseau
Arnaud Tournant
Laurent Gané
 Great Britain (GBR)
Chris Hoy
Craig MacLean
Jason Queally
 Australia (AUS)
Gary Neiwand
Sean Eadie
Darryn Hill
2004 Athens
details
 Germany (GER)
Jens Fiedler
Stefan Nimke
René Wolff
 Japan (JPN)
Toshiaki Fushimi
Masaki Inoue
Tomohiro Nagatsuka
 France (FRA)
Mickaël Bourgain
Laurent Gané
Arnaud Tournant
2008 Beijing
details
 Great Britain (GBR)
Chris Hoy
Jason Kenny
Jamie Staff
 France (FRA)
Grégory Baugé
Kévin Sireau
Arnaud Tournant
 Germany (GER)
René Enders
Maximilian Levy
Stefan Nimke
2012 London
details
 Great Britain (GBR)
Chris Hoy
Jason Kenny
Philip Hindes
 France (FRA)
Grégory Baugé
Kévin Sireau
Michaël D'Almeida
 Germany (GER)
René Enders
Maximilian Levy
Robert Förstemann
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
 Great Britain (GBR)
Philip Hindes
Jason Kenny
Callum Skinner
 New Zealand (NZL)
Eddie Dawkins
Ethan Mitchell
Sam Webster
 France (FRA)
Grégory Baugé
Michaël D'Almeida
François Pervis
2020 Tokyo
details
 Netherlands (NED)
Jeffrey Hoogland
Harrie Lavreysen
Roy van den Berg
 Great Britain (GBR)
Jack Carlin
Jason Kenny
Ryan Owens
 France (FRA)
Florian Grengbo
Rayan Helal
Sébastien Vigier
2024 Paris
details
 Netherlands (NED)
Roy van den Berg
Harrie Lavreysen
Jeffrey Hoogland
 Great Britain (GBR)
Ed Lowe
Hamish Turnbull
Jack Carlin
 Australia (AUS)
Leigh Hoffman
Matthew Richardson
Matthew Glaetzer

Two riders have won two gold medals in the cross-country; Julien Absalon of France (2008 and 2012), and Tom Pidcock of Great Britain (2020 and 2024). The most decorated rider is the Swiss Nino Schurter, with gold, silver and bronze across three editions from 2008 to 2016, while three other riders have one gold, and one other medal.

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1996 Atlanta
details
Bart Brentjens
 Netherlands
Thomas Frischknecht
 Switzerland
Miguel Martinez
 France
2000 Sydney
details
Miguel Martinez
 France
Filip Meirhaeghe
 Belgium
Christoph Sauser
 Switzerland
2004 Athens
details
Julien Absalon
 France
José Antonio Hermida
 Spain
Bart Brentjens
 Netherlands
2008 Beijing
details
Julien Absalon
 France
Jean-Christophe Péraud
 France
Nino Schurter
 Switzerland
2012 London
details
Jaroslav Kulhavý
 Czech Republic
Nino Schurter
 Switzerland
Marco Aurelio Fontana
 Italy
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
Nino Schurter
 Switzerland
Jaroslav Kulhavý
 Czech Republic
Carlos Coloma Nicolás
 Spain
2020 Tokyo
details
Tom Pidcock
 Great Britain
Mathias Flückiger
 Switzerland
David Valero
 Spain
2024 Paris
details
Tom Pidcock
 Great Britain
Victor Koretzky
 France
Alan Hatherly
 South Africa

BMX

[edit]
Games Gold Silver Bronze
2020 Tokyo
details
Logan Martin
 Australia
Daniel Dhers
 Venezuela
Declan Brooks
 Great Britain
2024 Paris
details
José Torres
 Argentina
Kieran Reilly
 Great Britain
Anthony Jeanjean
 France
Games Gold Silver Bronze
2008 Beijing
details
Māris Štrombergs
 Latvia
Mike Day
 United States
Donny Robinson
 United States
2012 London
details
Māris Štrombergs
 Latvia
Sam Willoughby
 Australia
Carlos Oquendo
 Colombia
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
Connor Fields
 United States
Jelle van Gorkom
 Netherlands
Carlos Ramírez
 Colombia
2020 Tokyo
details
Niek Kimmann
 Netherlands
Kye Whyte
 Great Britain
Carlos Ramírez
 Colombia
2024 Paris
details
Joris Daudet
 France
Sylvain André
 France
Romain Mahieu
 France

Discontinued events

[edit]

Road race, team

[edit]
Games Gold Silver Bronze
1928 Amsterdam
details
 Denmark (DEN)
Henry Hansen
Orla Jørgensen
Leo Nielsen
 Great Britain (GBR)
Jack Lauterwasser
John Middleton
Frank Southall
 Sweden (SWE)
Gösta Carlsson
Erik Jansson
Georg Johnsson
1932 Los Angeles
details
 Italy (ITA)
Giuseppe Olmo
Attilio Pavesi
Guglielmo Segato
 Denmark (DEN)
Henry Hansen
Leo Nielsen
Frode Sørensen
 Sweden (SWE)
Arne Berg
Bernhard Britz
Sven Höglund
1936 Berlin
details
 France (FRA)
Robert Charpentier
Robert Dorgebray
Guy Lapébie
 Switzerland (SUI)
Edgar Buchwalder
Ernst Nievergelt
Kurt Ott
 Belgium (BEL)
Auguste Garrebeek
Armand Putzeys
François Vandermotte
1948 London
details
 Belgium (BEL)
Léon Delathouwer
Eugène van Roosbroeck
Lode Wouters
 Great Britain (GBR)
Robert John Maitland
Ian Scott
Gordon Thomas
 France (FRA)
José Beyaert
Jacques Dupont
Alain Moineau
1952 Helsinki
details
 Belgium (BEL)
Robert Grondelaers
André Noyelle
Lucien Victor
 Italy (ITA)
Dino Bruni
Gianni Ghidini
Vincenzo Zucconelli
 France (FRA)
Jacques Anquetil
Claude Rouer
Alfred Tonello
1956 Melbourne
details
 France (FRA)
Arnaud Geyre
Maurice Moucheraud
Michel Vermeulin
 Great Britain (GBR)
Arthur Brittain
William Holmes
Alan Jackson
 United Team of Germany (EUA)
Reinhold Pommer
Gustav-Adolf Schur
Horst Tüller
Games Gold Silver Bronze
1912 Stockholm
details
 Sweden (SWE)
Erik Friborg
Ragnar Malm
Axel Persson
Algot Lönn
 Great Britain (GBR)
Frederick Grubb
Leonard Meredith
Charles Moss
William Hammond
 United States (USA)
Carl Schutte
Alvin Loftes
Albert Krushel
Walter Martin
1920 Antwerp
details
 France (FRA)
Achille Souchard
Fernand Canteloube
Georges Detreille
Marcel Gobillot
 Sweden (SWE)
Harry Stenqvist
Sigfrid Lundberg
Ragnar Malm
Axel Persson
 Belgium (BEL)
Albert Wyckmans
Albert De Bunné
Bernard Janssens
André Vercruysse
1924 Paris
details
 France (FRA)
Armand Blanchonnet
René Hamel
André Leducq
Georges Wambst
 Belgium (BEL)
Henri Hoevenaers
Auguste Parfondry
Jean Van Den Bosch
Fernand Saivé
 Sweden (SWE)
Gunnar Sköld
Erik Bohlin
Ragnar Malm
Erik Bjurberg
1928–1956 not included in the Olympic program
1960 Rome
details
 Italy (ITA)
Livio Trapè
Antonio Bailetti
Ottavio Cogliati
Giacomo Fornoni
 United Team of Germany (EUA)
Gustav-Adolf Schur
Egon Adler
Erich Hagen
Günter Lörke
 Soviet Union (URS)
Aleksei Petrov
Viktor Kapitonov
Yevgeny Klevtsov
Yury Melikhov
1964 Tokyo
details
 Netherlands (NED)
Bart Zoet
Evert Dolman
Gerben Karstens
Jan Pieterse
 Italy (ITA)
Ferruccio Manza
Severino Andreoli
Luciano Dalla Bona
Pietro Guerra
 Sweden (SWE)
Sture Pettersson
Sven Hamrin
Erik Pettersson
Gösta Pettersson
1968 Mexico City
details
 Netherlands (NED)
Joop Zoetemelk
Fedor den Hertog
Jan Krekels
René Pijnen
 Sweden (SWE)
Sture Pettersson
Tomas Pettersson
Erik Pettersson
Gösta Pettersson
 Italy (ITA)
Pierfranco Vianelli
Giovanni Bramucci
Vittorio Marcelli
Mauro Simonetti
1972 Munich
details
 Soviet Union (URS)
Valery Yardy
Gennady Komnatov
Valery Likhachov
Boris Shukov
 Poland (POL)
Ryszard Szurkowski
Edward Barcik
Lucjan Lis
Stanisław Szozda
None awarded [2]
1976 Montreal
details
 Soviet Union (URS)
Aavo Pikkuus
Valery Chaplygin
Anatoly Chukanov
Vladimir Kaminsky
 Poland (POL)
Ryszard Szurkowski
Tadeusz Mytnik
Mieczysław Nowicki
Stanisław Szozda
 Denmark (DEN)
Jørn Lund
Verner Blaudzun
Gert Frank
Jørgen Hansen
1980 Moscow
details
 Soviet Union (URS)
Yury Kashirin
Oleg Logvin
Sergei Shelpakov
Anatoly Yarkin
 East Germany (GDR)
Falk Boden
Bernd Drogan
Olaf Ludwig
Hans-Joachim Hartnick
 Czechoslovakia (TCH)
Michal Klasa
Vlastibor Konečný
Alipi Kostadinov
Jiří Škoda
1984 Los Angeles
details
 Italy (ITA)
Marcello Bartalini
Marco Giovannetti
Eros Poli
Claudio Vandelli
 Switzerland (SUI)
Alfred Achermann
Richard Trinkler
Laurent Vial
Benno Wiss
 United States (USA)
Ron Kiefel
Clarence Knickman
Davis Phinney
Andrew Weaver
1988 Seoul
details
 East Germany (GDR)
Jan Schur
Uwe Ampler
Mario Kummer
Maik Landsmann
 Poland (POL)
Andrzej Sypytkowski
Joachim Halupczok
Zenon Jaskuła
Marek Leśniewski
 Sweden (SWE)
Michel Lafis
Anders Jarl
Björn Johansson
Jan Karlsson
1992 Barcelona
details
 Germany (GER)
Michael Rich
Bernd Dittert
Christian Meyer
Uwe Peschel
 Italy (ITA)
Andrea Peron
Flavio Anastasia
Luca Colombo
Gianfranco Contri
 France (FRA)
Jean-Louis Harel
Hervé Boussard
Didier Faivre-Pierret
Philippe Gaumont

Early Games (1896–1908)

[edit]

During the first four Games of the Olympiad, track cycling events were held over various distances that were contested at one or two Games only.

Event 96 00 04 08 Gold Silver Bronze
¼ mile Marcus Hurley
 United States
Burton Downing
 United States
Teddy Billington
 United States
⅓ mile Marcus Hurley
 United States
Burton Downing
 United States
Teddy Billington
 United States
660 yards Victor Johnson
 Great Britain
Émile Demangel
 France
Karl Neumer
 Germany
½ mile Marcus Hurley
 United States
Teddy Billington
 United States
Burton Downing
 United States
1 mile Marcus Hurley
 United States
Burton Downing
 United States
Teddy Billington
 United States
2 miles Burton Downing
 United States
Oscar Goerke
 United States
Marcus Hurley
 United States
5 km Benjamin Jones
 Great Britain
Maurice Schilles
 France
André Auffray
 France
5 miles Charles Schlee
 United States
George E. Wiley
 United States
Arthur F. Andrews
 United States
10 km Paul Masson
 France
Léon Flameng
 France
Adolf Schmal
 Austria
20 km Clarence Kingsbury
 Great Britain
Benjamin Jones
 Great Britain
Joseph Werbrouck
 Belgium
25 km Louis Bastien
 France
Louis Hildebrand
 France[3][4]
Auguste Daumain
 France
25 miles Burton Downing
 United States
Arthur F. Andrews
 United States
George E. Wiley
 United States
100 km Léon Flameng
 France
Georgios Kolettis
 Greece
None awarded
Charles Bartlett
 Great Britain
Charles Denny
 Great Britain
Octave Lapize
 France
12 hours Adolf Schmal
 Austria
Frederick Keeping
 Great Britain
None awarded

50 km

[edit]
Games Gold Silver Bronze
1920 Antwerp
details
Henry George
 Belgium
Cyril Alden
 Great Britain
Piet Ikelaar
 Netherlands
1924 Paris
details
Ko Willems
 Netherlands
Cyril Alden
 Great Britain
Harry Wyld
 Great Britain
Games Gold Silver Bronze
1900 Paris
details
Enrico Brusoni
 Italy
Karl Duill
 Germany
Louis Trousselier
 France
1904–1980 not included in the Olympic program
1984 Los Angeles
details
Roger Ilegems
 Belgium
Uwe Messerschmidt
 West Germany
José Youshimatz
 Mexico
1988 Seoul
details
Dan Frost
 Denmark
Leo Peelen
 Netherlands
Marat Ganeyev
 Soviet Union
1992 Barcelona
details
Giovanni Lombardi
 Italy
Léon van Bon
 Netherlands
Cédric Mathy
 Belgium
1996 Atlanta
details
Silvio Martinello
 Italy
Brian Walton
 Canada
Stuart O'Grady
 Australia
2000 Sydney
details
Joan Llaneras
 Spain
Milton Wynants
 Uruguay
Alexei Markov
 Russia
2004 Athens
details
Mikhail Ignatiev
 Russia
Joan Llaneras
 Spain
Guido Fulst
 Germany
2008 Beijing
details
Joan Llaneras
 Spain
Roger Kluge
 Germany
Chris Newton
 Great Britain
Games Gold Silver Bronze
1964 Tokyo
details
Jiří Daler
 Czechoslovakia
Giorgio Ursi
 Italy
Preben Esaksson
 Denmark
1968 Mexico City
details
Daniel Rebillard
 France
Mogens Frey Jensen
 Denmark
Xaver Kurmann
 Switzerland
1972 Munich
details
Knut Knudsen
 Norway
Xaver Kurmann
 Switzerland
Hans Lutz
 West Germany
1976 Montreal
details
Gregor Braun
 West Germany
Herman Ponsteen
 Netherlands
Thomas Huschke
 East Germany
1980 Moscow
details
Robert Dill-Bundi
 Switzerland
Alain Bondue
 France
Hans-Henrik Ørsted
 Denmark
1984 Los Angeles
details
Steve Hegg
 United States
Rolf Gölz
 West Germany
Leonard Nitz
 United States
1988 Seoul
details
Gintautas Umaras
 Soviet Union
Dean Woods
 Australia
Bernd Dittert
 East Germany
1992 Barcelona
details
Chris Boardman
 Great Britain
Jens Lehmann
 Germany
Gary Anderson
 New Zealand
1996 Atlanta
details
Andrea Collinelli
 Italy
Philippe Ermenault
 France
Bradley McGee
 Australia
2000 Sydney
details
Robert Bartko
 Germany
Jens Lehmann
 Germany
Bradley McGee
 Australia
2004 Athens
details
Bradley Wiggins
 Great Britain
Bradley McGee
 Australia
Sergi Escobar
 Spain
2008 Beijing
details
Bradley Wiggins
 Great Britain
Hayden Roulston
 New Zealand
Steven Burke
 Great Britain
Games Gold Silver Bronze
1908 London
details
 André Auffray
and Maurice Schilles (FRA)
 Frederick Hamlin
and Horace Johnson (GBR)
 Charlie Brooks
and Walter Isaacs (GBR)
1912 Stockholm not included in the Olympic program
1920 Antwerp
details
 Thomas Lance
and Harry Ryan (GBR)
 William Smith
and James Walker (RSA)
 Frans de Vreng
and Piet Ikelaar (NED)
1924 Paris
details
 Lucien Choury
and Jean Cugnot (FRA)
 Edmund Hansen
and Willy Hansen (DEN)
 Gerard Bosch van Drakestein
and Maurice Peeters (NED)
1928 Amsterdam
details
 Bernhard Leene
and Daan van Dijk (NED)
 Ernest Chambers
and John Sibbit (GBR)
 Hans Bernhardt
and Karl Köther (GER)
1932 Los Angeles
details
 Louis Chaillot
and Maurice Perrin (FRA)
 Ernest Chambers
and Stanley Chambers (GBR)
 Harald Christensen
and Willy Gervin (DEN)
1936 Berlin
details
 Ernst Ihbe
and Carl Lorenz (GER)
 Bernhard Leene
and Hendrik Ooms (NED)
 Pierre Georget
and Georges Maton (FRA)
1948 London
details
 Renato Perona
and Ferdinando Teruzzi (ITA)
 Alan Bannister
and Reg Harris (GBR)
 Gaston Dron
and René Faye (FRA)
1952 Helsinki
details
 Lionel Cox
and Russell Mockridge (AUS)
 Raymond Robinson
and Thomas Shardelow (RSA)
 Antonio Maspes
and Cesare Pinarello (ITA)
1956 Melbourne
details
 Joey Browne
and Tony Marchant (AUS)
 Ladislav Fouček
and Václav Machek (TCH)
 Giuseppe Ogna
and Cesare Pinarello (ITA)
1960 Rome
details
 Giuseppe Beghetto
and Sergio Bianchetto (ITA)
 Jürgen Simon
and Lothar Stäber (EUA)
 Vladimir Leonov
and Boris Vasilyev (URS)
1964 Tokyo
details
 Angelo Damiano
and Sergio Bianchetto (ITA)
 Imants Bodnieks
and Viktor Logunov (URS)
 Willi Fuggerer
and Klaus Kobusch (EUA)
1968 Mexico City
details
 Daniel Morelon
and Pierre Trentin (FRA)
 Leijn Loevesijn
and Jan Janssen (NED)
 Daniel Goens
and Robert van Lancker (BEL)
1972 Munich
details
 Vladimir Semenets
and Igor Tselovalnikov (URS)
 Jürgen Geschke
and Werner Otto (GDR)
 Andrzej Bek
and Benedykt Kocot (POL)
Games Gold Silver Bronze
1896 Athens
details
Paul Masson
 France
Stamatios Nikolopoulos
 Greece
Adolf Schmal
 Austria
1900–1924 not included in the Olympic program
1928 Amsterdam
details
Willy Hansen
 Denmark
Gerard Bosch van Drakestein
 Netherlands
Dunc Gray
 Australia
1932 Los Angeles
details
Dunc Gray
 Australia
Jacobus van Egmond
 Netherlands
Charles Rampelberg
 France
1936 Berlin
details
Arie van Vliet
 Netherlands
Pierre Georget
 France
Rudolf Karsch
 Germany
1948 London
details
Jacques Dupont
 France
Pierre Nihant
 Belgium
Tommy Godwin
 Great Britain
1952 Helsinki
details
Russell Mockridge
 Australia
Marino Morettini
 Italy
Raymond Robinson
 South Africa
1956 Melbourne
details
Leandro Faggin
 Italy
Ladislav Fouček
 Czechoslovakia
Alfred Swift
 South Africa
1960 Rome
details
Sante Gaiardoni
 Italy
Dieter Gieseler
 United Team of Germany
Rostislav Vargashkin
 Soviet Union
1964 Tokyo
details
Patrick Sercu
 Belgium
Giovanni Pettenella
 Italy
Pierre Trentin
 France
1968 Mexico City
details
Pierre Trentin
 France
Niels Fredborg
 Denmark
Janusz Kierzkowski
 Poland
1972 Munich
details
Niels Fredborg
 Denmark
Danny Clark
 Australia
Jürgen Schütze
 East Germany
1976 Montreal
details
Klaus-Jürgen Grünke
 East Germany
Michel Vaarten
 Belgium
Niels Fredborg
 Denmark
1980 Moscow
details
Lothar Thoms
 East Germany
Aleksandr Panfilov
 Soviet Union
David Weller
 Jamaica
1984 Los Angeles
details
Fredy Schmidtke
 West Germany
Curtis Harnett
 Canada
Fabrice Colas
 France
1988 Seoul
details
Aleksandr Kirichenko
 Soviet Union
Martin Vinnicombe
 Australia
Robert Lechner
 West Germany
1992 Barcelona
details
José Manuel Moreno
 Spain
Shane Kelly
 Australia
Erin Hartwell
 United States
1996 Atlanta
details
Florian Rousseau
 France
Erin Hartwell
 United States
Takanobu Jumonji
 Japan
2000 Sydney
details
Jason Queally
 Great Britain
Stefan Nimke
 Germany
Shane Kelly
 Australia
2004 Athens
details
Chris Hoy
 Great Britain
Arnaud Tournant
 France
Stefan Nimke
 Germany

All-time medal table (Men's) 1896–Present

[edit]
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 France34212277
2 Italy2915852
3 Great Britain24252372
4 United States12131540
5 Australia10141337
6 Germany1091332
7 Soviet Union104822
8 Netherlands917632
9 Denmark791026
10 Belgium781025
11 East Germany65415
12 Switzerland57416
13 Spain55313
14 West Germany44412
15 Sweden33814
16 Russia3148
17 Czechoslovakia2226
18 Latvia2013
19 South Africa1438
20 United Team of Germany1427
21 Greece1304
22 Czech Republic1102
 Kazakhstan1102
24 Austria1023
 Norway1023
26 Argentina1001
27 Poland0549
28 Canada0336
29 New Zealand0246
30 Japan0134
31 Colombia0123
32 Portugal0101
 Ukraine0101
 Uruguay0101
35 Jamaica0011
 Malaysia0011
 Mexico0011
Totals (37 entries)190190186566

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ On 17 January 2013, Lance Armstrong was stripped of the bronze medal and disqualified by the International Olympic Committee for an anti-doping rule violation. They also decided not to award Spanish cyclist Abraham Olano the medal, as he had also tested positive for doping, back in 1998.
  2. ^  Netherlands were disqualified when Aad van den Hoek tested positive for coramine. The fourth-placed Belgian team were not awarded the bronze medal because they had not been tested for drugs.
  3. ^ "Paris 1900 Cycling Track Results". Olympics.com. Retrieved 2021-08-02.
  4. ^ Originally recorded as a British athlete due to birth, his medal was reassigned to France, where he married, lived and worked, by the IOC in June 2024.