Madison (cycling) explained

The Madison is a relay race event in track cycling, named after the first Madison Square Garden in New York, and known as the "American race" in French (course à l'américaine) and as Americana in Spanish and in Italian.

The race

The Madison is a race in which the team which completes the most laps wins. Tied positions are split by points awarded for placings at a series of sprints at intervals during the race. Teams usually have two riders but occasionally three. Riders in each team take turns, with only one rider per team racing at any time. After resting, riders can return to the race. To take over, the replacement rider has to be touched, pushed, often on the shorts, or hurled by the departing team member by a hand-sling.

How long each rider stays in the race is for the rider's team to decide. Originally, riders took stints of several hours and the resting rider could sleep or have a meal. That was easier in earlier six-day races because hours could pass without riders attempting to break away from the others. As races became more intensive, both riders from a team began riding simultaneously, one going fast on the shortest racing line around the base of the track and the other idling higher up until that rider's turn to take over. Modern six-day races last less than 12 hours a day and the Madison is now only a featured part, so staying on the track throughout is more feasible.

The Madison is a feature of six-day races, but it can also be a separate race, as in the Olympic Games. It has its own championships and specialist riders. UCI-sanctioned Madison races have a total distance of .

History

The Madison began as a way of circumventing laws passed in New York in the US, aimed at restricting the exhaustion of cyclists taking part in six-day races.

According to a contemporary newspaper clipping retained by Major Taylor:

The riders are becoming peevish and fretful. The wear and tear upon their nerves and their muscles, and the loss of sleep make them so. If their desires are not met with on the moment, they break forth with a stream of abuse. Nothing pleases them. These outbreaks do not trouble the trainers with experience, for they understand the condition the men are in.[1]

The condition included delusions and hallucinations. Riders wobbled and frequently fell. But the riders were often well paid, especially since more people came to watch them as their condition worsened. Promoters in New York paid Teddy Hale $5,000 when he won in 1896 and he won "like a ghost, his face as white as a corpse, his eyes no longer visible because they'd retreated into his skull," as one report had it.

The New York Times said in 1897:

An athletic contest in which participants "go queer" in their heads, and strain their powers until their faces become hideous with the tortures that rack them, is not sport. It is brutality. Days and weeks of recuperation will be needed to put the Garden racers in condition, and it is likely that some of them will never recover from the strain.[2]

Alarmed, New York and Illinois ruled in 1898 that no competitor could race for more than 12 hours a day. The promoter of the event at Madison Square Garden, reluctant to close his stadium for half the day, realized that giving each rider a partner with whom he could share the racing meant the race could still go on 24 hours a day but that no one rider would exceed the 12-hour limit. Speeds rose, distances grew, crowds increased, money poured in. Where Charlie Miller rode alone, the Australian Alf Goullet and a decent partner could ride .

The fastest known average speed of a Madison men's race is, achieved by the Australian duo of Sam Welsford and Leigh Howard, at the world cup race in Glasgow, United Kingdom, 9 November 2019.[3]

Origins of the name Madison Racing

The term Madison Racing derives essentially from a sequence of local New York City names honoring President James Madison. A lodge had been built at what was then the prominent and northernmost waypoint into and out of New York City. In honor of the recently deceased president, the cottage was named Madison Cottage. After the demise of Madison cottage, the site gave rise to a park, in turn named Madison Square,[4] which remains today. A series of four sports venues subsequently took their names from Madison Square - each named, one after the other, Madison Square Gardens. The first two were located directly adjacent to (and took their name from) Madison Square. The second Madison Square Gardens (1890-1925) became a prominent cycling venue,[5] and gave rise to the track cycle racing that ultimately carried the name Madison Racing.

The full rules

The official rules of the Madison, which are traditionally regarded as being hard to follow, are stated as follows by British Cycling, the British Governing Body of Cycling:[6]

Olympics

The Madison was an Olympic event for men in 2000, 2004 and 2008, but was dropped ahead of the 2012 London Olympics, in part for reasons of gender equality as there was no equivalent race for women at that time.[7]

In June 2017, the International Olympic Committee announced that the Madison would be added to the Olympic programme for the 2020 Summer Olympics.[8] The 2020 Games includes a relaunch of the men's Madison event, as well as the introduction of the women's Madison as an Olympic event for the first time. The inaugural women's event was won by Katie Archibald and Laura Kenny for Team GB.[9]

Records

Points

Men
FormatPointsTeamEventDateLocationRef
U1630 Oscar Nilsson-Julien
Jack Rootkin-Gray
HSBC UK National Youth and Junior Track Championships N.Y.O23 July 2018 Geraint Thomas National Velodrome of Wales, Newport International Sports Village, Newport, Wales[10]
Jack Brough
Joshua Giddings
HSBC UK 2019 National Youth and Junior Track Championships N.Y.O5 August 2019 Geraint Thomas National Velodrome of Wales, Newport International Sports Village, Newport, Wales[11]
Youth9 Thomas Bostock
William Draper
British Cycling Junior & Youth A National Track Championships1 August 2016 Derby Velodrome, Derby, England[12]
Junior (30 km)56 Ilia Schegolkov
Vlas Shichkin
2019 UEC European Track Championships (under-23 & junior)9–14 July 2019 Vlaams Wielercentrum Eddy Merckx, Ghent, Belgium[13]
U23 (50 km)121 Matthew Walls
Ethan Hayter
2018 UEC European Track Championships (under-23 & junior)21–26 August 2018 World Cycling Centre, Aigle, Switzerland[14]
50 km129 Aaron Gate
Campbell Stewart
2019–20 UCI Track Cycling World Cup6–8 December 2019 Avantidrome, Cambridge, New Zealand[15]
50 km Olympic43 Lasse Norman Hansen
Michael Mørkøv
2020 Summer Olympics7 August 2021 Izu Velodrome, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan[16]
30 km76 Campbell Stewart
Aaron Gate
2018–19 UCI Track Cycling World Cup18–20 January 2019 Avantidrome, Cambridge, New Zealand[17]
World Cup2000 Lasse Norman Hansen
Michael Mørkøv
Casper von Folsach
Julius Johansen
2018–19 UCI Track Cycling World Cup19 November 2018 – 27 January 2019Various[18]
World Cup (Old scoring)32 Roger Kluge
Robert Bartko
Robert Bengsch
Marcel Kalz
Marcel Barth
Erik Mohs
2009–10 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics30 October 2009 – 24 January 2010Various[19]
20 km11 Ross Sander
Geraint Thomas
2005–06 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics11 December 2005 Manchester Velodrome, Manchester, England[20]
Mikhail Ignatiev
Nikolay Trussov
22 January 2006 VELO Sports Center, Los Angeles, United States[21]
40 km28 Alexander Aeschbach
Franco Marvulli
2001 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics26 August 2001 Velodrome Rakyat, Ipoh, Malaysia[22] [23]
80 km45 Bryan Steel
Robert Hayles
1994 British National Track Championships30 July 1994 Herne Hill Velodrome, London, England[24]
Women
FormatPointsTeamEventDateLocationRef
U1630 Emma Finucane
Sophie Lewis
HSBC UK National Youth and Junior Track Championships N.Y.O23 July 2018 Geraint Thomas National Velodrome of Wales, Newport International Sports Village, Newport, Wales
Zoe Backstedt
Millie Couzens
HSBC UK 2019 National Youth and Junior Track Championships N.Y.O5 August 2019 Geraint Thomas National Velodrome of Wales, Newport International Sports Village, Newport, Wales
Youth9 Anna Docherty
Pfeiffer Georgi
British Cycling Junior & Youth A National Track Championships1 August 2016 Derby Velodrome, Derby, England
Junior (20 km)322017 UEC European Track Championships (under-23 & junior)19–23 July 2017 Sangalhos Velodrome, Sangalhos, Portugal[25]
U23 (50 km)85 Maria Novolodskaya
Diana Klimova
2018 UEC European Track Championships (under-23 & junior)21–26 August 2018 World Cycling Centre, Aigle, Switzerland[26]
30 km56 Georgia Baker
Annette Edmondson
2019–20 UCI Track Cycling World Cup13–15 December 2019 Anna Meares Velodrome, Brisbane, Australia[27]
30 km Olympic78 Katie Archibald
Laura Kenny
2020 Summer Olympics6 August 2021 Izu Velodrome, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan[28]
20 km39 Jolien D'Hoore
Lotte Kopecky
2018–19 UCI Track Cycling World Cup18–20 January 2019 Avantidrome, Cambridge, New Zealand[29]
World Cup1950 Neah Evans
Emily Kay
Katie Archibald
Elinor Barker
Laura Kenny
Emily Nelson
2018–19 UCI Track Cycling World Cup19 November 2018 – 27 January 2019Various[30]

Times

Men

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ritchie . Andrew . Major Taylor: The Extraordinary Career of a Champion Bicycle Racer . 1996 . John Hopkins Paperbacks . San Francisco . 0-8018-5303-6 . 66 . 5.
  2. News: A BRUTAL EXHIBITION.. The New York Times . December 11, 1897. NYTimes.com.
  3. Web site: Tissot timing, November 9, 2019.. 10 September 2023.
  4. Jackson, Kenneth T. (ed.), The Encyclopedia of New York City (1995) ISBN 0-300-05536-6
  5. Web site: America’s Short, Violent Love Affair With Indoor Track Cycling . Atlas Obscura . Nathalie Lagerfeld . September 27, 2016 .
  6. Web site: Technical Regulations For General, Road, Track & Roller Racing . British Cycling . 24.14 Madison, page 102 . 2016-03-09.
  7. News: UCI plans major shake-up of Olympic track programme. cyclingnews. 26 September 2009. 24 March 2018.
  8. Web site: Madison and BMX Freestyle Park added to Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games Programme. 9 June 2017. 24 March 2018. Union Cycliste Internationale.
  9. Web site: Tokyo 2020 Official Reports - Final Results - Women's Madison. 2021-08-06. 2021-08-06. 2021-08-06. https://web.archive.org/web/20210806191816/https://olympics.com/tokyo-2020/olympic-games/resOG2020-/pdf/OG2020-/CTR/OG2020-_CTR_C73H_CTRWMADISON-----------FNL-000100--.pdf. dead.
  10. Web site: Events. 2021-08-06. British Cycling. en.
  11. Web site: Events. 2021-08-06. British Cycling. en.
  12. Web site: Events. 2021-08-06. British Cycling. en.
  13. Web site: Men's junior madison results. 10 September 2023.
  14. Web site: Men's under-23 madison results. 10 September 2023.
  15. Web site: Men's Madison Results. tissottiming.com. 10 September 2023.
  16. Web site: Cycling Track – Men's Madison – Results. olympics.com. TOCOG. 7 August 2021. 7 August 2021. 7 August 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210807120254/https://olympics.com/tokyo-2020/olympic-games/resOG2020-/pdf/OG2020-/CTR/OG2020-_CTR_C73H_CTRMMADISON-----------FNL-000100--.pdf. dead.
  17. Web site: Men's Madison Results. tissottiming.com. 10 September 2023.
  18. Web site: Men's Madison Results. tissottiming.com. 10 September 2023.
  19. Web site: 2012-03-27. World Cup Standings / Classement coupe du monde As of 24 JAN 2010. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20120327085417/http://www.tissottiming.com/sports/cycling/track/classics2010_beijing/Mens_Madison_WorldCupStandings.pdf. 2012-03-27. 2021-08-06. Tissott Timing.
  20. Web site: www.cyclingnews.com - the world centre of cycling. autobus.cyclingnews.com.
  21. Web site: www.cyclingnews.com - the world centre of cycling. autobus.cyclingnews.com.
  22. Web site: Track World Cup 2001. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20110722083341/http://oldsite.uci.ch/english/track/world_cup/world_cup_2001/wc_01/index.htm. 2011-07-22. 2021-08-06. UCI.
  23. Web site: World Cup. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20120803101019/http://oldsite.uci.ch/data_2001/track/world_cup/wc_05/result.htm. 2012-08-03. 2021-08-06. UCI.
  24. Web site: 940917 National Madison. 2021-08-06. www.paulcurran.bike.
  25. Web site: Women Junior Madison results. 10 September 2023.
  26. Web site: Women's under-23 madison results. 10 September 2023.
  27. Web site: Women's Madison Results. tissottiming.com. 10 September 2023.
  28. Web site: 6 August 2021. Cycling Track – Women's Madison – Results. 6 August 2021. olympics.com. TOCOG. 6 August 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210806191816/https://olympics.com/tokyo-2020/olympic-games/resOG2020-/pdf/OG2020-/CTR/OG2020-_CTR_C73H_CTRWMADISON-----------FNL-000100--.pdf. dead.
  29. Web site: Women's Madison Results. tissottiming.com. 10 September 2023.
  30. Web site: Women's Madison Results. tissottiming.com. 10 September 2023.
  31. Web site: 2014-12-23. Revolution Series - Rudy Project RT stay out in front of Elite Championship as Team Sky win Round 4. 2021-08-06. https://web.archive.org/web/20141223130141/http://www.cyclingrevolution.com/news/article/rudy-project-rt-stay-out-in-front-of-elite-championship-as-team-sky-win-round-4.html. 2014-12-23.