*** Welcome to piglix ***

Cycling at the 2008 Summer Olympics – Women's BMX

Women's BMX
at the Games of the XXIX Olympiad
Venue Laoshan BMX Field
Date August 20, 2008 (seeding)
August 22, 2008 (semifinals and final)
Competitors 16 from 13 nations
Winning time 35.976
Medalists
1st, gold medalist(s) Anne-Caroline Chausson
 France
2nd, silver medalist(s) Laëtitia Le Corguillé
 France
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Jill Kintner
 United States
2012 →
1st, gold medalist(s) Anne-Caroline Chausson
 France
2nd, silver medalist(s) Laëtitia Le Corguillé
 France
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Jill Kintner
 United States

The women's BMX cycling at the 2008 Summer Olympics took place on August 20–22 at the Laoshan BMX Field, the first to be officially featured in the Olympic cycling program.

Coming out of retirement from her sporting career to try out for BMX at age thirty, France's Anne-Caroline Chausson escaped from an early race crash that left two riders off the ramp to claim the event's inaugural Olympic gold medal. She thundered home on the final stretch to a spectacular finish with a fastest time in 35.976. Chausson also enjoyed her teammate Laëtitia Le Corguillé taking home the silver in 38.042, as she finished the race behind the leader by nearly seven hundredths of a second (0.07) and also, handed the French squad a straight 1–2 finish on the medal podium. Meanwhile, United States' Jill Kintner came up with a powerful, stalwart ride to earn the bronze in 38.674, edging out New Zealand's Sarah Walker by a short sprint distance.

Sixteen riders representing twelve countries qualified for the event. Qualification was based on UCI ranking by nations, 2008 UCI BMX World Championships results and wild-cards reserved to a Tripartite Commission (IOC, ANOC, UCI).

Each of the 16 women competing performed two runs of the course in individual time trials to determine seeding for the knockout rounds. Then, they were grouped into 2 semifinal groups based on that seeding. Each semifinal consisted of three runs of the course, using a point-for-place system. The top four cyclists in each semifinal (for a total of 8) moved on to the final. Unlike the semifinals, the final consisted of a single race with the first to the finish line claiming the gold medal.

All times are China Standard Time (UTC+8)


...
Wikipedia

...