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| Event type

Time Trial, Individual, Men

Date18 August 2004 — 15:00
StatusOlympic
LocationOlympiako Kentro Vouliagmenis, Vouliagmeni
Participants38 from 26 countries
Format48.0 km. (29.8 miles).

Tyler Hamilton was the second best American road racer in the early part of the 21st century, following Lance Armstrong. Thru 2001 he had been one of Armstrong’s lieutenants on the US Postal Service team but he left in 2002 to ride for Team CSC. He was renowned for his efforts in the 2003 Tour de France, in which he fractured his collarbone early in the race, but continued to ride despite the pain, winning the 16th stage in a long solo breakaway and placing fourth in GC in Paris. In 2004 he moved to Phonak but this time had to leave the Tour de France after a back injury sustained in a 13th stage fall, and then had to deal with the death of his beloved golden retriever, Tugboat (aka Tugger). On the Vouliagmeni course, Hamilton started out slowly as his earpiece radio was broken and he could not hear the splits. But he finished the race stronger than any rider and bested the time of defending gold medalist Vyacheslav Yekimov by almost 19 seconds, winning the gold medal.

And then the excrement struck the cooling apparatus. Hamilton’s doping test showed evidence of blood doping. But it was not conclusive, and no action was taken initially, so the B sample was frozen. The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) asked for a review of the tests, but with the B sample having been frozen, it was inadequate to test for blood transfusions. Because a doping positive required both the A and B samples to be positive, Hamilton was exonerated and retained his gold medal.

A few weeks later, racing in the Vuelta a España, Hamilton again tested positive for blood transfusions, and this time both the A and B samples were positive. He lost his contract with Phonak, and was banned from cycling for two years, despite appeals to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), which were rejected. When Hamilton’s ban was about to run out in late 2006, he was then implicated in the Spanish doping scandal, Operación Puerto, when faxes which seemed to be from Hamilton’s wife, Haven, showed evidence of payments for various performance enhancing drugs. Hamilton finally was able to return to competition in approved races in 2008 and immediately won the U.S. National Championship. But the entire episode took a huge toll on him financially and he and his wife divorced after the strain affected their marriage.

In 2009 Hamilton again failed a doping test and was banned for eight years and he retired from competition, of necessity. In May 2011 he admitted to doping during his career. In August 2012 the IOC disqualified Hamilton from the 2004 Olympics after he had written a letter to IOC President Rogge admitting his doping violations. Later in 2012 he published a book The Secret Race in which he detailed his doping history and implicated many professional riders for widespread doping in the professional peleton.

PosCompetitorNOCTimeIntermediate 1Intermediate 2Intermediate 3
1Vyacheslav YekimovRUS57:50.5814:14.82 (1)28:32.69 (1)43:28.09 (2)Gold
2Bobby JulichUSA57:58.1914:25.84 (7)28:42.81 (5)43:34.18 (4)Silver
3Mick RogersAUS58:01.6714:16.70 (2)28:36.94 (2)43:29.43 (3)Bronze
4Michael RichGER58:09.4614:21.44 (4)28:42.35 (4)43:46.58 (5)
5Aleksandr VinokurovKAZ58:58.1414:25.36 (6)29:13.05 (9)44:22.89 (6)
6Jan UllrichGER59:02.0414:28.20 (8)29:10.89 (7)44:23.73 (7)
7Santiago BoteroCOL59:04.7614:30.03 (10)29:09.42 (6)44:26.26 (8)
8Igor González de GaldeanoESP59:27.2514:28.30 (9)29:12.62 (8)44:28.42 (9)
9Fabian CancellaraSUI59:42.3814:24.02 (5)29:17.67 (10)44:53.93 (11)
10Yuriy KrivtsovUKR59:49.4014:54.56 (19)29:39.84 (14)44:52.16 (10)
11Christophe MoreauFRA59:50.2814:47.91 (16)29:36.51 (12)44:59.48 (12)
12Marc WautersBEL59:59.6314:47.00 (15)29:39.69 (13)44:59.78 (13)
13Michal HrazdíraCZE1-00:07.2314:57.82 (20)29:42.80 (15)45:08.33 (15)
14Víctor Hugo PeñaCOL1-00:09.8914:45.19 (14)29:35.07 (11)45:04.18 (14)
15José Iván GutiérrezESP1-00:22.8014:43.45 (11)29:44.86 (18)45:13.45 (16)
16René AndrleCZE1-00:27.2915:11.08 (25)30:07.05 (24)45:40.51 (23)
17Eric WohlbergCAN1-00:31.4915:03.43 (22)29:52.89 (22)45:25.56 (18)
18Peter Van PetegemBEL1-00:35.7315:07.04 (23)29:44.05 (17)45:34.93 (21)
19Frank HøjDEN1-00:37.4914:52.21 (18)29:51.66 (21)45:25.76 (19)
20Thomas DekkerNED1-00:38.0514:48.64 (17)29:49.94 (19)45:26.44 (20)
21László BodrogiHUN1-00:44.3114:44.53 (13)29:43.96 (16)45:21.85 (17)
22Serhiy HoncharUKR1-01:00.4714:44.29 (12)29:50.77 (20)45:36.67 (22)
23Yevgeny VakkerKGZ1-01:21.1015:11.00 (24)30:02.05 (23)46:10.80 (24)
24Sérgio PaulinhoPOR1-01:25.6315:21.67 (29)30:20.54 (25)46:18.04 (25)
25Benoît JoachimLUX1-01:50.4615:17.20 (27)30:25.43 (27)46:39.74 (26)
26Rubens BertogliatiSUI1-02:16.5615:16.55 (26)30:22.75 (26)46:40.83 (27)
27Kurt Asle ArvesenNOR1-02:21.2815:29.99 (31)30:39.63 (29)47:00.14 (29)
28Yevgeny PetrovRUS1-02:50.3214:58.61 (21)30:25.85 (28)46:51.14 (28)
29Stuart DangerfieldGBR1-03:00.7215:52.51 (36)31:14.41 (33)47:34.42 (32)
30Dawid KrupaPOL1-03:07.0515:41.87 (34)30:55.14 (31)47:26.24 (31)
31Thor HushovdNOR1-03:10.3615:18.60 (28)30:40.54 (30)47:03.48 (30)
32Heath BlackgroveNZL1-03:20.1115:39.52 (33)31:14.47 (34)47:34.53 (33)
33Thomas LöfkvistSWE1-03:43.7015:37.91 (32)31:01.87 (32)47:42.14 (34)
34Gorazd ŠtangeljSLO1-03:45.8415:53.83 (37)31:16.18 (35)47:54.67 (35)
35Matej JurčoSVK1-04:22.5815:48.08 (35)31:35.54 (36)48:27.83 (36)
36Sławomir KohutPOL1-06:19.2916:09.52 (38)32:19.96 (37)49:23.78 (37)
DNFAndrey KashechkinKAZ15:23.25 (30)– (–)– (–)
DQTyler HamiltonUSA[57:31.74][14:18.91] ([3])[28:38.04] ([3])[43:23.37] ([1])1