Now that was something else.
In arguably the most thrilling, nail-biting, and intense hour-and-a-half of the entire cycling season, Tom Pidcock recovered from a mid-race puncture to claw back a 40-second deficit on home favourite Victor Koretzky, before bursting past the Frenchman through an impossible gap in the dying seconds to win his second consecutive Olympic mountain bike cross-country gold.
(Ed Sykes/SWpix.com)
After a relatively steady start, the multi-disciplinary British star had begun to stamp his authority on the race by the third lap when, in the company of Koretzky, he suffered an untimely puncture, albeit within metres of the pits.
However, by the time the admittedly dithering British mechanics had swapped out his front wheel, Pidcock was 36 seconds behind, a deficit that grew over the next lap as the 24-year-old regained his composure.
But, instead of one all-out concerted effort to claw his way back to the front, the defending champion remained calm, slowly working his way through the field as Koretzky kept his own composure while being roared on by a raucous home crowd, eager to see a French gold double following Pauline Ferrand-Prévot’s win in Élancourt Hill yesterday.
(Alex Whitehead/SWpix.com)
As 30 seconds ticked down to 15, and then to 10, Pidcock finally bridged across to Koretzky on the penultimate lap, followed by Alan Hatherly, aiming to become Africa’s first Olympic mountain bike medallist.
Never one to bide his time in the wheels, Pidcock immediately drove it on the front, launching a series of accelerations in a bid to dislodge his unmoving French rival.
After these probing moves failed, and with Pidcock aiming to capitalise on his uphill strength, all eyes turned to the final steep climbing section before the swift drop to the line. But as the world waited for the inevitable Pidcock acceleration, it was the cunning Koretzky, in a sensational display of strength and tactics, who instead launched on the sharp rise, opening a small gap to the Ineos man.
Desperately clinging on as they plummeted towards the line, Pidcock clawed his way back again following a small hiccup by the Frenchman, setting up a scintillating sprint for gold.
(Alex Whitehead/SWpix.com)
And then, with the finish line almost in sight as they made their way through the trees on Élancourt Hill’s rare natural section, Pidcock dive bombed Koretzky around a tree, nudging his wheel in front as the pair made contact.
That brief contact was enough to unclip and unsettle the Frenchman, who was forced to watch in agony as Pidcock celebrated across the line mere metres ahead to a chorus of jeers from a home crowd equally devastated by the shocking twist which came at the end of one of cycling’s great thrillers.
A hostile, booing crowd may not have been the soundtrack Pidcock expected to hear as he won his second Olympic gold at the age of 24 – but I doubt he’ll care much.
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I saw a TV ad by them at the weekend, which must be linked to this campaign.
I admit I thought it was kind of odd. An oil company which makes money from people driving, encouraging people to walk to the shops or ride bikes and stuff. I can't on the face of it see what they'll get out of it, but I'm sure they have an angle…
Reply to brooksby:
These companies need a positive image, like any other company, to sell their product. This way, they can make people feel good when burning their oil - while stopping almost no-one from doing so...
And then, don't forget, oil companies have employees as well that feel for the climate and environment. They will work on producing the fuel efficiently and with less harmful impact of the production - and will rationalise that in the end, the consumers are burning the fuels, and if they don't produce it, someone else will - perhaps in an even "less clean" way... (I do agree about consumers needing to take more responsibility than they do now, for example by cycling instead of driving.)
Green-washing.
Shhh! Don't let the Telegraph or the Independent hear...
Not cycling, but…
Japan cracks down on use of rideable electric suitcases amid tourist boom
https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/jul/29/japan-rideable-lug...
If luggage is something that is lugged (i.e. heavy and cumbersome), but the case is carrying a person, then which is the true luggage?
Terry Pratchett as futurologist? This one is hopefully less ferocious...
That reminds me of a mimic treasure chest
Offenders should be told to pack it in...
The authorities have to consider the evidence on a case by case basis...
Well if they will rely on dodgy cheap batteries off the internet...
Well, that sounds like the worst case scenario
Reminds me of when I saw a traveller that was so tired that he collapsed onto a luggage carousel. Took quite a while for him to come round
And presumably even longer to collect himself.
I think that only happens in some cases.
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