Showing posts with label bradley wiggins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bradley wiggins. Show all posts

Saturday, 6 August 2016

Rio 2016 Olympics: Great expectations for Team GB

RIO 2016 OLYMPICS
Preview - Sport-by-sport - Results/table
 
THE WORLD turned its eyes towards Rio de Janeiro today as Great Britain aims to follow up the success of London 2012 with its best ever overseas performance at an Olympics.

UK Sport, the nation's high performance funding agency, has set British athletes the ambitious target of winning 48 medals, one more than what was achieved at Beijing in 2008. 

But, having won 29 golds and 65 medals overall four years ago on home soil, this year's objective actually seems reasonable enough. 

The Guardian newspaper agrees and has predicted a total of 58 medals. Meanwhile, its broadsheet counterpart, the Telegraph, reports sports data firm Gracenote Sports has made a forecast of 56.

On that basis, the upper level of the range of attainment set by UK Sport - a total of 79 medals - would clearly appear to be rather pushing it.

In fact, to achieve that level, Britain would have to buck a historic trend whereby no country which hosted an Olympics has gone onto beat their total of medals at the very next Games.


Certainly, though, Team GB - as it is officially branded - has far too much talent to suffer the same fate as the last squad which travelled to the western hemisphere for a Summer Olympics. 

Then, back in 1996, Britain won only 15 medals overall to finish the Games at Atlanta in a humiliating position of 36th in the table.

Indeed, only Steve Redgrave and Matthew Pinsent in the men's coxless pair prevented Great Britain from returning from a Summer Olympics for the first time without a single gold medal. 

A definitive nadir had been reached. 

Thankfully, though, the British Olympic Association had a plan involving funding from the National Lottery and the set-up of UK Sport to identify the best opportunities for success. 

There was an injection of funding into sailing, cycling and rowing, in particular, while the two sports with most medals on offer - athletics and swimming - were also strategically targeted.

Immediately, there was an improved showing. At Sydney in 2000 and Athens in 2004, Team GB climbed up to 10th in the table with 11 and nine golds respectively.

Then came the huge success in Beijing where Britain was ranked fourth - behind only China, United States and Russia - having delivered 19 golds.

And most recently, four years ago, came those magical two weeks in London where, as hosts, Team GB achieved a top-three position for the first time since 1920 by slipping ahead of the Russians.

Of course, the strategy of UK Sport can be considered controversial in some respects.

Sports such as basketball, synchronised swimming, water polo and weightlifting had their funding withdrawn after they were seen to have underachieved at London 2012.

Critics have pointed out that such judgements can be a matter of perception and that the withdrawal of funding denies the sport any chance of improvement as it has an inevitable knock-on effect at a grassroots level.

In fairness to UK Sport, though, its funds are not limitless - and, even then, its targets are not solely just about winning.

Some of the targets refer to final placings outside of the medal positions so that it can recognise if elite performance in a sport has progressed or not.

And, overall, a majority of sports fans would probably consider that the governing body has been getting it right.

After all, since it was set up, cyclist Sir Chris Hoy has - with six golds - become the nation's most successful Olympian, overtaking the aforementioned Redgrave.

Moreover, with seven medals, Hoy also shares the lead for most medals altogether with Sir Bradley Wiggins. Hoy has now retired, of course, so fellow cyclist Wiggins can take an outright lead in Rio.

In track and field, the likes of Jessica Ennis-Hill, Mo Farah and Greg Rutherford have become household names across Britain after starring in Super Saturday four years ago.

Meanwhile, boxer Nicola Adams and taekwondo champion Jade Jones are both back looking to add to their respective happy London 2012 memories.

Team GB is again expected to perform well in anything involving a boat - such as rowing, sailing and canoeing - while the Brownlee brothers, Alistair and Jonathan, still rule the roost in triathlon.

Swimming is expected to go a lot better than it did four years ago when Britain finished with just three medals, none of which were gold.

Indeed, Adam Peaty has been widely tipped to become the first British male Olympic champion in the pool since Adrian Moorhouse in 1988.

Elsewhere, there are genuine prospects of success in diving through Tom Daley, and in gymnastics through Louis Smith and Max Whitlock.

Team GB flagbearer Andy Murray will defend his Olympic title fresh from winning Wimbledon for a second time.

And, then of course, there is golf which is making its first appearance at a Games since 1904.

It could also be its last. Concerns over the outbreak of the Zika virus have been especially prominent in the golfing world and each of the men's top-four ranked players, including Rory McIlroy, will not be in Rio.

In fairness to the golfers, a group of 150 physicians and scientists sent an open letter to the World Health Organization (WHO) in May, calling upon them to have "an open, transparent discussion of the risks of holding the Olympics as planned in Brazil".

But the WHO dismissed the request, stating that "cancelling or changing the location of the 2016 Olympics will not significantly alter the international spread of Zika virus", and that there was "no public health justification" for postponing them.

Even still, getting the show on the road in Rio has not been easy amid an economic and political crisis which has engulfed Brazil.

The Brazilian economy has officially been experiencing an economic recession since early 2014.

And this has been coupled with a political crisis which has resulted in President Dilma Rousseff facing an impeachment trial over allegations she manipulated the government budget.

Unsurprisingly, there have been the customary complaints about the accommodation facilities - most notably from the Australians - while traffic jams have clogged up the city in the build-up.

Of course, the biggest pre-Olympic storm was not something for which Rio could be blamed.

Doping in sport, and at the Olympics especially, is nothing new - but the subject became especially prominent in the run-up to these Games, with the spotlight falling on Russia in particular.

An independent investigation commissioned by the World Anti-Doping Agency reported that Russia's Ministry of Sport and Federal Security Service had operated a "state-dictated" system to implement an extensive doping program and to cover up positive samples.

In response, the International Olympics Committee (IOC) immediately called an emergency meeting to discuss the report.

But then, in a total cop-out, spineless IOC president Thomas Bach left it up to individual sports federations to decide whether Russian athletes should be able to compete.

Ultimately, 271 Russians were cleared for competition while 118 were removed with Russia claiming now to have the cleanest team at the Games

Closer to home, cyclist Lizzie Armitstead found her way into the headlines for all the wrong reasons after it was revealed she had missed three drugs tests.

Armitstead - who won Team GB's very first medal at London 2012 - has denied any wrongdoing on her part but it is difficult not to be cynical.

Hopefully then, Rio 2016 will instead provide only positive stories from now on and cynicism can take a back seat.

After all, even just as a viewer, the best thing about the Olympics is the sheer escapism of it: a two-week period every four years where the drudgery of life is put on hold and all that really matters is which men and women in this world can go highest, go fastest and be strongest.

Unfortunately, for people watching in Britain, many of the biggest events are in the middle of the night.

The men's 100m final, for instance, is scheduled to be run at 2.25am in the early hours of Monday 15 August.

Nevertheless, the BBC is providing round-the-clock coverage for nightowls and a daily highlights show at 9.15am to allow people to catch-up on anything which they have missed.

There will also be a montage or two, and - no doubt at some point - a moment for which a lump in the throat is unavoidable.

Welcome back to the Olympic Games - the greatest show on earth.

Sunday, 26 July 2015

Tour de France: Froome defeats them all

CHRIS FROOME became a double Tour de France champion on a sodden Champs-Élysées in Paris tonight, overcoming obstacles both on and off the road in a gruelling three-week campaign.

On the road, Froome ultimately finished in a total official time of 81 hours, 56 minutes and 33 seconds - 1'12" ahead of his closest rival, Colombian Nairo Quintana.

Moreover, Froome became the first man since the legendary Belgian Eddy Merckx in 1970 to win the general classification and the King of the Mountains prize in the same year.

Notably, this was also Team Sky's third overall victory in the last four years after Sir Bradley Wiggins' win in 2012 and Froome's first in 2013. However, success for Team Sky and Froome, in particular, has come at a cost.

For, in the past three weeks, the Kenya-born Briton has been subject to some of the most vile abuse in the Tour's 112-year history.

Some members of the crowd have spat at him and, in one particularly nasty incident, a cup of urine was chucked at him by a man accusing him of being a doper.

The assaults became so bad that Tour race director Christian Prudhomme demanded that the French public show respect to all of the competitors and especially the yellow jersey. Meanwhile, Froome began a stage in Mende surrounded by gendarmes.

Unsurprisingly, just as he did two years ago, the 30-year-old also went to some lengths to deny the accusations of his detractors.

But, as Team Sky general manager Sir Dave Brailsford has said, it is difficult to "prove" a negative.

That has not stopped Sky trying their best to end the rumours - and, in an unprecedented move, the team published some of Froome's performance data before calling on others to do the same.

Nevertheless, even the equivalent of a Formula One team allowing its rivals to look at its technical data has clearly not been enough to satisfy some critics - and Froome is aware that they are unlikely ever to be convinced.

Perhaps the most obvious explanation for the French hatred of Froome is petty jealousy - for, while he has won their race twice since 2013, it is now 30 years since France last toasted a home-grown success.

Of course, public opinion rarely suddenly springs from absolutely nowhere, and Team Sky has angrily made its position quite clear on some of the disreputable reporting by host broadcaster France 2.

It has not helped either that the likes of serial doper Lance Armstrong and accused cheat Laurent Jalabert have cast their own doubts.

Banned Armstrong even had the audacity to turn up and ride part of this year's Tour route, albeit in a private capacity for charity purposes.

Overall, though, Armstrong's presence anywhere near the race casts a shadow which it is still struggling to shrug off - and which, in turn, gives false credence to Froome's accusers.

After all, it only took one phenomenal performance from him - on Bastille Day - for them all to crawl out of the woodwork.

The Tour, which this year had began in the Netherlands for the sixth time in its history, had made its way across the north of France via several crashes caused by difficult crosswinds.

Froome had briefly worn yellow after the third day before German sprinter Tony Martin enjoyed the flat stages out in front prior to crashing out.

Then, on 14 July, Froome made his move. Up the Col de Soudet on the way into La Pierre Saint-Martin, high in the Pyrenees, he destroyed the field and finished the day with a lead of nigh on three minutes.

It was a brilliant performance by Froome, one which matched his attack on Mont Ventoux which all but won him the race in 2013, and none of his rivals for the yellow jersey - Quintana, reigning champ Vincent Nibali or Alberto Contador - got anywhere near his pace.

Suddenly, it was all about countering rumours and protecting the lead for Team Sky, although Froome did actually extend his advantage further on stage 14 on the Côte de la Croix Neuve.

That stage also saw Merseysider Steve Cummings win in the Tour de France for the first time ever, while Manx Missile Mark Cavendish had earlier won his 26th individual stage in a sprint to Fougères.

For Froome, however, success or failure would ultimately be decided in the Alps - and, on stage 19, Nibali and Quintana had nibbled into his lead a little.

Inevitably then, it would all come down to the climb up the Alpe d'Huez on the penultimate day yesterday, in what is very much the blue ribbon event of the Tour de France in general.

This time, Froome was in defensive mode, ready to shut down any attacks by his closest rival Quintana but not willing to expend potentially needed energy by attacking from the front.

For a while, Froome had the situation under control - but, aware he was running out of opportunities, Quintana was relentless in his approach and eventually opened up a gap of around 30 seconds.

The Colombian then stretched his lead and Froome - with his Sky team-mates Richie Porte and Wouter Poels - had to work hard to limit any losses.

They knew, however, if they could do this that victory would be theirs. This was, after all, Quintana's very last chance.

Amid a lot of tension, Froome - emotionally and physically exhausted - did indeed succeed in his task on the Alpe, and Quintana eventually was only able to take 86 seconds out of the Briton's lead of 2'38".

All that was left for Froome to do this evening was to make the short ride into the damp streets of Paris while sipping the sweet taste of champagne and the even sweeter taste of success.

For, let there be no doubt about it - this victory, for Froome and for Team Sky, was particularly sweet.

DAY-BY-DAY


RouteDistWinnerYellow jerseyLead
0104-JulUtrecht (time-trial)13.8kmRohan DennisRohan Dennis+5"
0205-JulUtrecht to Zeeland166kmAndré Griepel Fabian Cancellara+3"
0306-JulAntwerp to Huy159.5kmJoaquim RodríguezChris Froome+1"
0407-JulSeraing to Cambrai223.5kmTony MartinTony Martin+12"
0508-JulArras to Amiens189.5kmAndré GriepelTony Martin+12"
0609-JulAbbeville to Le Harve191.5kmZdeněk Štybar Tony Martin+12"
0710-JulLivarot to Fougères 190.5kmMark CavendishChris Froome+11"
0811-JulRennes to Mûr-de-Bretagne181.5kmAlexis VuillermozChris Froome+11"
0912-JulVannes to Plumelec (team time-trial) 28kmBMC RacingChris Froome+12"
Rest13-JulPau-



1014-JulTarbes to La Pierre Saint-Martin167kmChris FroomeChris Froome+2'52"
1115-JulPau to Cauterets188kmRafał MajkaChris Froome+2'52"
1216-JulLannemezan to Plateau de Beille195kmJoaquim RodríguezChris Froome+2'52"
1317-JulMuret to Rodez198.5kmGreg Van AvermaetChris Froome+2'52"
1418-JulRodez to Mende178.5kmSteve CummingsChris Froome+3'10"
1519-JulMende to Valence183kmAndré GriepelChris Froome+3'10"
1620-JulBourg-de-Péage to Gap201kmRubén PlazaChris Froome+3'10"
Rest21-JulGap-



1722-JulDigne-les-Bains to Pra Loup161kmSimon GeschkeChris Froome+3'10"
1823-JulGap to Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne186.5kmRomain BardetChris Froome+3'10"
1924-JulSaint-Jean-de-Maurienne to Les Sybelles138kmVincenzo NibaliChris Froome+2'38"
2025-JulModane to Alpe d'Huez110.5kmThibaut PinotChris Froome+1'12"
2126-JulSèvres to Paris109.5kmAndré GriepelChris Froome+1'12"

FINAL STANDINGS
General classification Yellow jersey
Pos
TeamTime
(1)Chris FROOME (GBR)Team Sky81h 56'33"
(2)Nairo QUINTANA (COL)Movistar+1'12"
(3)Alejandro VALVERDE (ESP)Movistar+5'25"
(4)Vincenzo NIBALI (ITA)Astana+8'36"
(5)Alberto CONTANDOR (ESP)Tinkoff-Saxo+9'48"

Points classification Green jersey
Pos
TeamPoints
(1)Peter SAGAN (SVK)Tinkoff-Saxo432
(2)André GRIEPEL (GER)Lotto-Soudal366
(3)John DEGENKOLB (GER)Giant-Alpecin298
(4)Mark CAVENDISH (GBR)Etixx-Quick Step206
(5)Bryan COQUARD (FRA)Team Europcar152

Mountains classification Red polka-dot jersey
Pos
TeamPoints
(1)Chris FROOME (GBR)Team Sky119
(2)Nairo QUINTANA (COL)Movistar108
(3)Romain BARDET (FRA)AG2R La Mondiale90
(4)Thibaut PINOT (FRA)FDJ82
(5)Joaquim RODRIGUEZ (ESP)Katusha78

Young riders classification White jersey
Pos
TeamTime
(1)Nairo QUINTANA (COL)Movistar81h 57'45"
(2)Romain BARDET (FRA)AG2R La Mondiale+14'48"
(3)Warren BARGUIL (FRA)Giant-Alpecin+30'03"
(4)Thibaut PINOT (FRA)FDJ+37'40"
(5)Bob JUNGELS (NED)Trek Factory+1h 32'09"

Friday, 4 July 2014

Yorkshire ready for t'Grand Départ

Buttertub Pass, Yorkshire Dales
CHRIS FROOME begins the defence of his Tour de France title tomorrow as the world's biggest annual sporting event starts in the unfamiliar surroundings of Yorkshire.

It is actually not that unusual for the Grand Départ of Le Tour to take place outside of France - in fact, this will be the 20th occurrence since idea was first implemented in Amsterdam in 1954.

And, largely done for financial gain by aiming to spread interest in the event, this will be the fourth time that Le Tour has come to Britain.

In 1974, the race visited for the first time with a one-day circuit stage in Plymouth - while the other two previous occasions are both in the last 20 years.

In 1994, Le Tour celebrated the opening of the Channel Tunnel with stages in Dover and Portsmouth.

Meanwhile, in 2007, London hosted the Grand Départ with a prologue time-trial before a full stage to Canterbury in Kent the next day.

It seems quite appropriate in a way for Le Tour to begin in Britain this year considering this country's recent success in the event.

Indeed, after 99 editions without a British winner, the last two have been won by Sir Bradley Wiggins in 2012 and Kenya-born Froome last year.

Of course, this has had the consequent effect of producing a simmering rivalry between the Team Sky team-mates - and, to some discord, it is Wiggins who has been dropped from the squad for 2014.

Olympic champion Wiggins now seems certain to move onto pastures new - but Froome will not bother himself worrying about that: he has a maillot jaune to retain.

The maillot jaune - or yellow jersey - is won by the leader of the general classification, i.e. the rider who has taken, cumulatively, the least amount of time to complete the race.

The three other jerseys are the maillot blanc - the white jersey - used to denote the best-placed rider under 26 years of age; the maillot a pois - the polka-dot jersey - worn by the King of the Mountains, the rider who has performed best on the mountain stage; and the maillot vert - the green jersey.

The green jersey is given to the rider who has picked up the most points during Le Tour, gained by winning stages and being the first to reach various points along the route. It rewards consistently good finishers and is usually won by a sprinter.

Britain has also had success in this category in recent years with Mark Cavendish winning it in 2011.

The Manxman, who has 25 stage wins altogether, was also an overall runner-up in 2009, 2010 and last year. Slovakian Peter Sagan, who has won for the last two years, is the man to beat.

The route: from Yorkshire to Paris
To begin its latest visit to Britain, Le Tour sets off from Harewood in West Yorkshire after a ceremonial roll-out from the city of Leeds.

The opening day finishes in the pretty spa town of Harrogate before the riders reconvene in York city centre on Sunday for a tougher second stage to Sheffield.

On the way to the Steel City, the competitors will ride right through Bronte country, visiting Haworth itself and then later Holmfirth where the Last of the Summer Wine was set.

And, having survived the treacherous cross-winds across the moors, the field may be split again as they take on Jenkin Road in Sheffield, a notoriously steep hill with a 33% gradient.

The peloton get it easier on day three, a largely flat stage, which sets off from the famously cycle-friendly university city of Cambridge and finishes outside of Buckingham Palace on the Mall in London.

Instead, all the attention will be specifically on the sprinters - and Britain's Cavendish in particular.

Cavendish failed to feature on the Mall in the closing stages of the London 2012 Olympics road race - so this particular stage offers him a chance of redemption ahead of Le Tour's return to mainland Europe from stage four.

But, even with the move back across the Channel, the rest of the race will not be exclusively held in France.

Stage five begins in Ypres, Belgium, in a commemorative nod to the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of World War One.

And, just like in Sheffield, Le Tour can easily be lost early on here, as the riders nimbly take on nine cobbled sections, wary of punctures and skids.

On day six, there will be more World War One remembrance with a départ in Arras and finish in Reims - before the race heads into the Alps on stage 13.

Coming out of the Alps after just two days, most of the climbing action this year is actually set in the Pyrenees - with stage 16 heading off from Carcassonne, a beautiful fairytale-like walled town.

Then, just before the finish, there may be a late twist in the tale in a 54km time trial between Bergerac and Périgueux.

This is the only time trial of any kind on the 2014 circuit and offers the chasing pack one final chance of reeling in a leader ahead of the ceremonial final stage on the Champs Élysée in Paris.

It is a gruelling three weeks with no guarantees - so tune in to daily coverage on ITV4 and British Eurosport to find out if the champagne flows for Froome again.

STAGE BY STAGE Tour de France 2014
(1)05-JulLeeds (UK) - Harrogate (UK)191km

(2)06-JulYork (UK) - Sheffield (UK)198km

(3)07-JulCambridge (UK) - London (UK)159km

(4)08-JulLe Touquet-Paris-Plage - Lille164km

(5)09-JulYpres (BEL) - Arenberg Porte du Hainaut156km

(6)10-JulArras - Reims194km

(7)11-JulÉpernay - Nancy 233km

(8)12-JulTomblaine - Gérardmer La Mauselaine 161km

(9)13-JulGérardmer - Mulhouse 166km

(10)14-JulMulhouse - La Planche des Belles Filles161km

(-)15-JulRest day


(11)16-JulBesançon - Oyonnax 186km

(12)17-JulBourg-en-Bresse - Saint-Étienne183km

(13)18-JulSaint-Étienne - Chamrousse200km

(14)19-JulGrenoble - Risoul177km

(15)20-JulTallard - Nîmes222km

(-)21-JulRest day


(16)22-JulCarcassonne - Bagnères-de-Luchon237km

(17)23-JulSaint Gaudens - Saint-Lary-Soulan Pla d'Adet125km

(18)24-JulPau - Hautacam145km

(19)25-JulMaubourguet Pays du Val d'Adour - Bergerac  208km

(20)26-JulBergerac - Périgueux (time trial)54km

(21)27-JulÉvry - Champs Élysée, Paris  136km

Sunday, 21 July 2013

Froome for another


CHRIS FROOME kept the Tour de France title in British hands after the traditional victory procession for the leader through Paris brought the 100th edition of the race to a close.

Froome saw off his closest rivals for the maillot jaune - Colombian Nairo Quintana and Spaniard Joaquim Rodríguez - by 4:20" and 5:04" respectively.

Meanwhile, another Spanish contender, two-time winner Alberto Contador finished fourth in the general classification, 6:27" off the pace over the 21 stages.

This was as convincing a win as it was going to get for the Kenya-born cyclist who went mountain biking as a teenager in the rural highlands, north of the capital Nairobi.

And that early training would prove absolutely vital for the toughest Tour route in living memory, without doubt a more difficult route than Sir Bradley Wiggins faced last year.

Of course, that fact should in no way denigrate Wiggins' achievement of becoming the first British cyclist to win the Tour last year, before he went on to win gold at the London Olympics.

Rather, it is an accurate assessment of the difficulties which Froome faced in his efforts to ensure that the very British cliché about London buses rang true.

Britain had waited 98 years for a winner of the Le Tour; now there has been two in a row.

Starting on the island of Corsica for the first time in history, the race got off to an inauspicious start for Froome when he crashed in the neutral zone before the race started in Porto-Vecchio.

Thankfully, no serious damage was done - and, following Sky's third place in the team time trial in Nice on day four, Froome was already well-placed in seventh overall, with support from Australian team-mate Richie Porte.

On stage eight, the first in the Pyrenees, Froome launched his first major attack of the Tour on the climb to the summit finish at Ax 3 Domaines.

It worked. The offensive strategy was a significant early success, and a devastating blow to the confidence of his rivals, none of whom could match his pace.

But, just as quickly as Froome had built his advantage, it was almost lost as Team Sky riders dropped like flies early on the following day.

Froome was suddenly horribly exposed and 23-year-old Quintana, in particular, proved a menace by continuously attacking with his team Movistar.

However, Froome - entirely against the odds - chased Quintana down to hold on, and he ultimately extended his lead in the General Classification after his team-mate Porte's terrible day in the saddle.

It was a brilliant defensive ride by the leader, arguably more important than his stage win 24 hours earlier, and at least there was a rest day to recover immediately afterwards.

On the resumption, Froome's next big day came in stage 11 - an individual time-trial to Mont-Saint-Michel in which he excelled, finishing second behind German Tony Martin to extend his overall lead past three minutes.

But, on flat stage 13, that was cut by 69 seconds as crosswinds split the peloton, and Bauke Mollema and Contador gained vital time, with an ailing Team Sky unable to respond.

Nevertheless, there was still some British success to celebrate heading into Saint-Amand-Montrond as Mark Cavendish chalked up his 25th stage win since 2008.

Otherwise, though, the Manx Missile will not look back on the last three weeks with particular fondness.

Stage 13 would ultimately be his only win and, on stage 11, he had to contend with being booed while, disgustingly, he also had urine thrown at him by a spectator.

Back to Froome - and the pressure was now on, his lead having been cut as the riders lined up for a race-defining stage up Mont Ventoux on Bastille Day.

Froome was brilliant and attacked up the exposed peak, overtaking Quintana in the run-in to win the stage by 29 seconds and stretch his overall lead back over four minutes.

The ascent of Mont Ventoux achieved notoriety, 46 years earlier on 13 July 1967, when it claimed the life of Britain's first world road race champion Tommy Simpson.

Simpson died close to the summit after taking a cocktail of amphetamines and alcohol - and there is a permanent memorial near to where he perished.

Such was Froome's dominance that it was perhaps inevitable awkward questions would be asked. Could his success - and that of Team Sky, led by Team GB performance director Sir Dave Brailsford, actually be attributed to doping?

The response was unequivocal and understandably angry.

Following Mont Ventoux, Brailsford said: "We have a great performance and I jump for joy and 10 minutes later I guarantee I will be answering these allegations and questions about doping for the next few days.”

Meanwhile, Froome added: "I just think it's quite sad that we're sitting here the day after the biggest victory of my life, a historic win, talking about doping.

"My team-mates and I have been away from home for months training together and working our arses off to get here, and here I am accused of being a cheat and a liar."

But, if Froome had been angered by the ongoing insinuations, he would prove over the final few days that they had not shaken him. 

On stage 17, an unusual mountain time trial, Froome took his third stage win of the Tour thanks to a combination of powerful riding and canny strategy.

Trailing his rival Contador throughout, an inspired swap to a time trial bike before the second of two category two climbs was probably the difference and he secured a nine-second win to put his overall advantage at 4:34".

For his rivals, Froome was still just about in reach, particularly as the centrepiece stage of the Tour was still to come.

The famous Alpe d'Huez would be climbed not once - but twice - to celebrate the 100th edition. It was, as one commentator described it, 42 hairpins of hell.

Froome, however, coped generally well - and, despite a 20-second penalty for taking on food in the final 5km of the stage, he still extended his lead by 37 seconds.

Some considered Froome's energy bar consumption as a rare sign of weakness but, in reality, it was probably another example of a shrewd tactical mind.

Without the extra energy, it was very possible that he would have lost more time than the penalty which was deducted from him. As it was, he was now in a formidable position with a lead of over five minutes.

Two more days in the Alps and, despite Quintana's win in stage 20, Froome's third-place finish meant that there was no significant bite into his advantage.

All he had to do tonight was remain upright on the cobbles of the Champs-Elysées, while sipping on champagne.

Mission accomplished. From Wiggins's super-domestique - and a second-placed finish - in 2012 to the maillot jaune champion of 2013. 

As the French say themselves, "Chapeau! à M. Froome".


OVERALL CLASSIFICATION Maillot Jaune
1Chris FROOME (Gbr)Team Sky83 hours 56 minutes 40 seconds
2Nairo QUINTANA (Col)Movistar+4:20
3Joaquim RODRIGUEZ (Esp)Katusha+5:04
4Alberto CONTADOR (Esp)Saxo-Tinkoff+6:27
5Roman KRUEZIGER (Cze)Saxo-Tinkoff+7:27

STAGE-BY-STAGE Tour de France 2013
(1)29 JunePorto-Vecchio - Bastia213kmMarcel Kittel (Ger)Kittel
(2)30 JuneBastia - Ajaccio156kmJan Bakelants (Bel)Bakelants
(3)1 JulyAjaccio - Calvi146kmSimon Gerrans (Aus)Bakelants
(4)2 JulyNice - Nice (team TT)25kmOrica-GreenEDGEGerrans
(5)3 JulyCagnes-sur-Mer - Marseille229kmMark Cavendish (Gbr)Gerrans
(6)4 JulyAix-en-Provence - Montpellier177kmAndre Greipel (Ger)Impey
(7)5 JulyMontpellier - Albi206kmPeter Sagan (Svk)Impey
(8)6 JulyCastres - Ax 3 Domaines195kmChris Froome (Gbr)Froome
(9)7 JulySaint Girons - Bagneres-de-Bigorre169kmDaniel Martin (Ire)Froome






(10)9 JulySaint Gildas-des-Bois - Saint Malo197kmMarcel Kittel (Ger)Froome
(11)10 JulyAvranches - Mont Saint-Michel (TT)33kmTony Martin (Ger)Froome
(12)11 JulyFougeres - Tours218kmMarcel Kittel (Ger)Froome
(13)12 JulyTours - Saint-Amand-Montrond173kmMark Cavendish (Gbr)Froome
(14)13 JulySaint-Pourcain-sur-Sioule - Lyon191kmMatteo Trentin (Ita)Froome
(15)14 JulyGivors - Mont Ventoux243kmChris Froome (Gbr)Froome






(16)16 JulyVaison-La-Romaine - Gap168kmRui Costa (Por)Froome
(17)17 JulyEmbrun - Chorges (TT)32kmChris Froome (Gbr)Froome
(18)18 JulyGap - Alpe d'Huez173kmChristophe Riblon (Fra)Froome
(19)19 JulyLe Bourg-d'Oisans - Le Grand-Bornand205kmRui Costa (Por)Froome
(20)20 JulyAnnecy - Mont Semnoz125kmNairo Quintana (Col)Froome
(21)21 JulyVersailles - Paris134kmMarcel Kittel (Ger)Froome

JERSEY WEARERS The winners
YellowGeneral ClassificationChris FROOME (Gbr)
GreenPoints ClassificationPeter SAGAN (Svk)
Red polka dotMountains ClassificationNairo QUINTANA (Col)
WhiteYoung Rider (under-26) ClassificationNairo QUINTANA (Col)
Black-on-yellow numberTeam ClassificationTeam SAXO-TINKOFF (Den)
White-on-red numberCombativity AwardChristophe RIBLON (Fra)

Friday, 21 December 2012

SPOTY 2012: Wiggo wins again


SPOTY
BRADLEY WIGGINS hailed his "greatest sporting achievement" after he won the 59th BBC Sports Personality of the Year award at the ExCel Arena in London on Sunday night. 

Wiggins - or Wiggo as he has been nicknamed - beat heptathlete star Jessica Ennis and tennis ace Andy Murray in the most prestigious staging of the awards ceremony in its history.

The 32-year-old cyclist won the toughest SPOTY choice ever having been the first Briton in history to win the Tour de France before he took Olympic time trial gold on the streets of London.

And, while Wiggins' win was well deserved, this was frankly such an outstanding year for British sport that any of the 12 contenders would have won the prize in any other year.

After all, double Olympic champion Laura Trott did not even make the cut - in sharp contrast to some of the winners in earlier, rather more inauspicious years.

Personally, my preference was for the main award to go to Mo Farah for providing prime-time must-watch viewing on successive Saturday nights in his 5,000m and 10,000m triumphs in the Olympic Stadium. 

But, Mo-Bots and Wiggo sideburns aside, all of the contenders for the main award had an amazing backstory or a unique selling point. 

Runner-up Jessica Ennis, for instance, was an athlete under pressure like no other this summer. As the great American sprinter Michael Johnson pointed out in an excellent video, she was the accepted "Face of the Games", and was expected to win. 

Thankfully, Sheffield-born Ennis is a steely character and she opened her account by running 12.54s in the 100m hurdles, a time that would have won gold in the individual event in 2008. 

Overall, Ennis stormed to gold with victories in three of the seven disciplines over two days, and the golden girl of British sport summed up perfectly just how well these Olympics were going. 

It was no surprise, meanwhile, that Andy Murray took third place in the voting. Remarkably, Britain had been craving a male Grand Slam champion for 77 years and, this year, the man from Dunblane finally delivered. 

First, though, Murray had to suffer more heartache as he broke down in tears after Roger Federer had beaten him in four sets in the Wimbledon final. 

But, if anything, that setback - his fourth Grand Slam final defeat - only spurred Murray on more and he gained revenge over Federer in the Olympics final, again at Wimbledon, winning in straight sets in one of his most complete performances ever. 

That same day, Murray partnered Laura Robson as an unseeded pair in the mixed doubles final. But, despite a gallant effort in which they took the first set, Murray-Robson ultimately had to settle for silver against their opponents, the number one seeds from Belarus. 

Murray was not finished yet. There was one last Grand Slam of the year to go: the US Open at Flushing Meadows in New York. 

There, Murray excelled again, beating Serbian world number one Novak Djokovic in an epic see-saw battle to fulfil his destiny

Britain's wait for a Grand Slam champion was over - as was Murray's own wait for a Grand Slam. It was as if the Olympics had never finished.

Murray's fellow Scot, Katherine Grainger, had endured a similar sporting tale. If Murray, until this year, had been the nearly-man, then rower Grainger had been the ultimate nearly-woman with three successive Olympic silvers in Sydney, Beijing and Athens. 

This was a "home" Games, though, and the feeling was that if Grainger could not win Olympic gold at Eton Dorney, then she never would. 

In the end, her superb partnership with Anna Watkins held firm. On the way to the final, the pair broke the double sculls world record, and then - importantly - in the final, they crossed the line first.

One man who has never struggled with doing that is another Scot on the shortlist, Sir Chris Hoy, who won the main award in 2008 after winning three gold medals in Beijing. 

In London, Hoy added another two golds to his collection to take his total to six golds (and one silver). 

And the comeback on the last bend of the Keirin race effectively made him Britain's most decorated Olympian in history, ahead of Sir Steve Redgrave. It is a remarkable career achievement.

Similarly, Paralympians Sarah Storey and David Weir can reflect on an amazing year with four gold medals each. 

Storey - who won five golds as a swimmer in the 1992 and 1996 Paralympic Games - has now added six golds to her tally as a cyclist in Beijing 2008 and London 2012. 

Meanwhile, Weir is now the recognised as the most versatile wheelchair athlete of all time after winning in London over four different distances ranging from 800m to the marathon.

But, for all of Weir and Storey's success, it was quickly established that it was Ellie Simmonds who would be "The Face" of the Paralympic Games. 

Just like Ennis before her, Simmonds delivered brilliantly under pressure, winning two golds, a silver and a bronze in the pool, setting world records in the 200m and 400m S6 freestyle.

Incredibly, Simmonds has just turned 18, and so - without trying to tempt fate - you would expect many more shiny honours will head her way in the years to come.

At the opposite end of the age scale is 35-year-old Ben Ainslie, who made his Olympics debut at Atlanta in 1996, taking silver at the age of 19. 

Since then, Ainslie has only ever known victory and he won his fourth successive gold at Weymouth to become the most decorated sailor in Olympic history.

It was not all plain sailing, however. In the early stages of the competition, Ainslie struggled to keep up with Danish rival Jonas Høgh-Christensen - and matters only got worse when Ainslie was forced into making a penalty turn in race two.

It turned out to be the worst thing that Høgh-Christensen could have done as an angry Ainslie simply became even more determined to win the Battle of the Bay in front of unprecedented crowds for an Olympic sailing event.

The support was also magnificent at the ExCel where Nicola Adams was another British Olympian making history as the first woman in history to win an Olympic boxing gold medal. 

Adams easily defeated Chinese world number one in the final of the flyweight bout - but it was probably her beaming smile and her effervescent personality which people will most remember of the Leeds lass.

And so, that just left Rory McIlroy, an outsider in this selection as the only one of the 12 contenders not to have taken part at either the Olympic or Paralympic Games.

It is not hard to see why McIlroy was chosen, however. The 23-year-old has had another fantastic year out on the course, climbing to the world number one ranking, and winning his second major championship, the PGA, by eight strokes.

Then, just as the sporting summer seemed ready to be put to rest, the Northern Irishman was part of the greatest comeback of the year - by Europe in the Ryder Cup.

This was the sporting year which just kept on giving.


OTHER AWARDS
Unsurprisingly, though, it was the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games which dominated proceedings in all of the other awards as well.

Team GB and Paralympics GB took the Team of the Year award, even though - technically - the decision was against the original rules.

While it does indeed seem like somewhat of a cop-out, the feel-good atmosphere generated by all of the home athletes in London 2012 made it no surprise that the regulations were changed unanimously by the panel.

Having said that, though, the above could have just as appropriately applied to another great team at London 2012, the Games Makers.

The Coach of the Year was Dave Brailsford, a fitting honour for a man who has done so much for elite cycling in this country.

Brailsford has not only overseen the successes of the Team GB cyclists as performance director of British Cycling - but he has also led Team Sky as its general manager, and boldly made the claim that a Briton would win the Tour de France.

His statement was roundly mocked at the time, particularly in the French press - but it is the likes of Wiggins and Brailsford who have got more and more Britons on their bikes and produced this incredible emergence of two-wheeled talent.

The Overseas Sports Personality of the Year was Usain Bolt who takes the prize for the third time in the last five years.

London 2012 was the Olympics in which Bolt went from being a fast man to a self-proclaimed legend after he defended his 100m and 200m Olympic titles in the face of strong competition from his protege Yohan Blake.

Bolt and Blake then teamed up as part of Team Jamaica to storm to a world record 4x100m title, making it six Olympic golds for the Fastest Man on the Planet.

If it was not for Jamaica, the award would have surely gone to Alex Zanardi, and perhaps it still should have done. Former F1 man Zanardi lost both his legs in a Champ Car crash in 2001 but has still managed to sate his competitive instincts by taking up road cycling.

Not only that but the Italian has succeeded, winning gold in the T4-category road race and road time trial, and adding silver in the road race relay. I suppose it just came down to the fact that Bolt is (understandably) a bigger name.

At least I did entirely agree with the Young SPOTY prize going to 15-year-old Jarrow swimmer Josef Craig, Britain's youngest gold medal winner from either the Olympic or the Paralympic Games.

This is, no doubt, a bit parochial - but, rather than the excellent Simmonds, the wonderful Weir, or the supreme Storey, it was Craig smashing two seconds off his own world record in the 400m freestyle S7 final pool which was the highlight of those Games for me.

But it was not just the action which will prove unforgettable from this summer. Yes, actions usually speak louder than words but sometimes it can be the other way around as Lord Sebastian Coe proved in picking up his Lifetime Achievement award.

Lord Coe was simply a fantastic orator this summer and genuinely moved me and made me proud when he signed off the London 2012 Games as chairman with the words: "When our time came, Britain, we did it right."

The speech of the night on Sunday, though, went to Martine Wright, who won the Helen Rollason award as someone who has shown "outstanding achievement in the face of adversity".

Wright's story will forever be intertwined with London 2012. On 6 July 2005, when it was announced by IOC chairman Jacques Rogge that London would host the Olympics seven years later, Wright went out for a few drinks with her work colleagues in celebration.

The following day, running late and attempting to take a shorter route to her office, Wright was caught up in the 7/7 bombings which would kill 52 people.

Wright lost both her legs at Aldgate tube station, and was lucky not to lose her life. Ever since, she considered it her destiny to be part of the London 2012 Games.

That dream was not to go unfulfilled and she qualified as a Paralympics GB team member as a sitting volleyball player.

And there was surely not a dry eye in the house as Wright said: "Thank you all so much for an absolutely fantastic summer."

To which I say - no, thank you for being part of it, Martine.

Monday, 13 August 2012

London 2012 Olympics: Happy and glorious - the Great British medallists

London 2012 Olympics on The Intrepid Reporter
Unofficial sport-by-sport guide - Medal calendar - Full results - The Big 4 - Team sports


"DOES it really have to end?" I asked at the conclusion of my last blog post. Sadly, yes, it did indeed have to end. 

But, from Lizzie Armistead's silver medal in the women's road race to Samantha Murray's medal of the same colour in the modern pentathlon, this was an epic 16 days which Great Britain, as a country, will never forget. 

London 2012 has, for a short while at least, made Britain feel truly great again as - despite all the worries beforehand - it has delivered a brilliant Olympic Games.

As chairman of organisers LOCOG, Lord Sebastian Coe - himself a two-time Olympic gold medallist - promised at the opening ceremony that London would "do it right". 

At the closing ceremony last night, he was able to confirm that had been the case. "We lit the flame and lit up the world," he added, before the biggest cheer of the night arrived. 

It was not for the athletes or their coaches - but deservedly for the Games Makers, a 70,000-strong army of volunteers who had changed the face of London for a glorious two weeks.

London was actually the first host to introduce volunteers to the Olympics when it hosted them previously in 1948 as a war-ravaged country struggled to meet the costs.

There were similar fears this time around. Britain may not be in a state of war but the economic outlook is little brighter and the £9bn which it spent was probably too much in the cold light of day.

Now that it is spent, though, it makes it all the more important then that the money has been invested wisely and that there is genuine legacy to London 2012. This can only be judged in time, of course.

For now, it is time just to sit back and recall the 65 medal-winning moments which Great British athletes produced at these brilliant Olympic Games, as well as so many other memories. 

A roll of honour featuring them all can be found below.

GOLD

Athletics
Jessica Ennis Heptathlon
Mo Farah 5,000m and 10,000m 
Greg Rutherford Long jump

Boxing
Nicola Adams Women's flyweight
Luke Campbell Men's bantamweight
Anthony Joshua Men's super heavyweight - Great Britain's 29th and final gold of London 2012

Canoe - slalom
Tim Baillie & Etienne Stott Men's C-2

Canoe - sprint
Ed McKeever Men's K-1 200m

Cycling - road
Bradley Wiggins Men's time trial

Cycling - track
Philip Hindes, Jason Kenny & Sir Chris Hoy Men's team sprint
Steven Burke, Ed Clancy, Geraint Thomas & Peter Kennaugh Men's team pursuit
Laura Trott, Dani King & Joanna Rowsell Women's team pursuit
Sir Chris Hoy Men's Keirin
Jason Kenny Men's sprint
Victoria Pendleton Women's Keirin
Laura Trott Women's Omnium

Equestrian - dressage
Laura Bechtolsheimer, Carl Hester & Charlotte Dujardin Team dressage
Charlotte Dujardin Individual dressage

Equestrian - jumping
Nick Skelton, Ben Maher, Scott Brash & Peter Charles Team jumping

Rowing
Helen Glover & Heather Stanning Women's pair - Great Britain's first gold of London 2012
Katherine Grainger & Anna Watkins Women's double scull
Andy Triggs Hodge, Pete Reed, Alex Gregory & Tom James Men's four
Katherine Copeland & Sophie Hosking Women's lightweight double scull

Sailing
Ben Ainslie Finn

Shooting
Peter Wilson Double trap

Taekwondo
Jade Jones Women's lightweight 57kg

Tennis
Andy Murray Men's singles

Triathlon
Alistair Brownlee Men's triathlon


SILVER
Athletics
Christine Ohuruogu 400m

Boxing
Fred Evans Men's welterweight

Canoeing - slalom
David Florence & Richard Hounslow Men's C-2

Cycling - road
Lizzie Armistead Women's road race - Great Britain's first medal of London 2012

Cycling - track
Victoria Pendleton Women's sprint

Equestrian - eventing
Tina Cook, William Fox-Pitt, Mary King, Zara Phillips & Nicola Wilson Team eventing

Gymnastics
Louis Smith Pommel horse

Judo
Gemma Gibbons Women's half-heavyweight 78kg

Modern Pentathlon
Samantha Murray Women's modern pentathlon - Great Britain's 65th and final medal of London 2012

Rowing
Chris Bartley, Richard Chambers, Peter Chambers & Rob Williams Men's lightweight four
Zac Purchase & Mark Hunter Men's lightweight double scull

Sailing
Iain Percy & Andrew Simpson Star
Nick Dempsey Men's RS-X
Luke Patience & Stuart Bithell Men's 470
Hannah Mills & Saskia Clark Women's 470

Swimming
Michael Jamieson 200m breaststroke

Tennis
Andy Murray & Laura Robson Mixed doubles




BRONZE 

Athletics
Robbie Grabarz High jump

Boxing
Anthony Ogogo Men's middleweight

Canoeing - sprint
Liam Heath & Jon Schofield Men's K-2 200m

Cycling - road  
Chris Froome Men's time trial

Cycling - track
Ed Clancy Men's Omnium

Diving
Tom Daley Men's 10m platform

Equestrian - dressage
Laura Bechtolsheimer Individual dressage

Gymnastics
Sam Oldham, Dan Purvis, Louis Smith, Kristian Thomas & Max Whitlock Men's team all-round
Max Whitlock Pommel horse
Beth Tweddle Uneven bars

Hockey
Women's team Beth Storry, Emile Maguire, Laura Unsworth, Crista Cullen, Hannah MacLeod, Anne Panter, Helen Richardson, Kate Walsh, Chloe Rogers, Laura Bartlett, Alex Danson, Georgie Twigg, Ashleigh Ball, Sally Walton, Nicola White & Sarah Thomas

Judo
Karina Bryant Women's heavyweight +78kg

Swimming
Rebecca Adlington 400m freestyle, 800m freestyle

Taekwondo
Lutalo Muhammad Men's middleweight 80kg

Triathlon
Jonny Brownlee Men's triathlon

Rowing
Alex Partridge, James Foad, Tom Ransley, Richard Egington, Mohamed Sbihi, Greg Searle, Matthew Langridge, Constantine Louloudis & Phelan Hill (cox) Men's eight
George Nash & Will Satch Men's pair
Alan Campbell Men's single scull


FINAL MEDAL TABLE
RankCountryGSBTotal
1UNITED STATES (USA)452929103
2China (CHN)38272388
3Great Britain & NI (GBR)29171965
4Russian Federation (RUS)24263282
5South Korea (KOR)138728
6Germany (GER)11191444
7France (FRA)11111234
8Italy (ITA)881127
9Hungary (HUN)84517
10Australia (AUS)7161235
11Japan (JPN)7141738
12Kazakhstan (KAZ)71513
13Netherlands (NED)66820
14Ukraine (UKR)65920
15New Zealand (NZL)62513
16Cuba (CUB)53614
17Iran (IRN)45312
18Jamaica (JAM)44412
19Czech Republic (CZE)43310
20North Korea (PRK)4026
21Spain (ESP)39416
22Brazil (BRZ)35917
23South Africa (RSA)3216
24Ethiopia (ETH)3137
25Croatia (CRO)3126
26Belarus (BLR)25512
27Romania (ROU)2529
28Kenya (KEN)24511
29Denmark (DEN)2439
30Poland (POL)22610
30Azerbaijan (AZE)22610
32Turkey (TUR)2215
33Switzerland (SUI)2204
34Lithuania (LIT)1124
35Norway (NOR)2114
36Canada (CAN)151218
37Sweden (SWE)1438
38Colombia (COL)1348
39Mexico (MEX)1337
39Georgia (GEO)1337
41Ireland (IRL)1135
42Argentina (ARG)1124
42Slovenia (SLO)1124
42Serbia (SBR)1124
45Tunisia (TUN)1113
46Dominican Republic (DOM)1102
47Trinidad & Tobago (TRI)1034
47Uzbekistan (UZB)1034
49Latvia (LAT)1012
50Algeria (ALG)1001
50Bahamas (BAH)1001
50Grenada (GRN)1001
50Uganda (UGA)1001
50Venezuela (VEN)1001
55India (IND)0246
56Mongolia (MGL) 0235
57Thailand (THA)0213
58Egypt (EGY)0202
59Slovakia (SVK)0134
60Belgium (BEL)0123
60Armenia (ARM)0123
60Finland (FIN)0123
63Indonesia (INA) 0112
63Bulgaria (BUL)0112
63Estonia (EST)0112
63Chinese Taipei (TPE)0112
63Malaysia (MAS)0112
63Puerto Rico (PUR)0112
69Botswana (BOT)0101
69Cyprus (CYP)0101
69Gabon (GAB)0101
69Guatemala (GUA)0101
69Montenegro (MNE)0101
69Portugal (POR)0101
75Greece (GRE)0022
75Moldova (MDA)0022
75Singapore (SIN)0022
75Qatar (QAT)0022
79Afghanistan (AFG)0011
79Bahrain (BRN)0011
79Hong Kong (HKG)0011
79Kuwait (KUW)0011
79Morocco (MAR)0011
79Saudi Arabia (KSA)0011
79Tajikistan (TJK)0011

Tuesday, 7 August 2012

London 2012 Olympics: Brilliant Hoy helps Britain smash target

London 2012 Olympics on The Intrepid Reporter
Unofficial sport-by-sport guide - Medal calendar - Full results - The Big 4 - Team sports

SIR CHRIS HOY became Britain's greatest ever Olympian this evening after winning his sixth career gold medal in the men's Keirin.

Hoy had to come from behind on the last lap to beat German Maximilian Levy, with Teun Mulder of Netherlands and New Zealander Simon van Velthooven in a dead heat for third.

Emotional scenes followed on the final day of action at the velodrome as retired rower Sir Steve Redgrave - with five Olympic golds, of course - hugged Hoy by the side of the track.

The Scotsman was also given a guard of honour by all of the British cycling coaches, and he simply could not keep away the tears when it came to the medal ceremony.

In terms of his future, 36-year-old Hoy said he would try to keep going until the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow but he confirmed that this was his last Olympics.

Likewise, Victoria Pendleton made her final Games appearance tonight. Unfortunately, for the Queen of the track, she went out on a low note after losing 2-0 to her great rival Australian Anna Meares in the sprint.

Nevertheless, Pendleton can reflect proudly on a career which has included two Olympic golds, one silver, nine world championship golds, two European championship golds and a Commonwealth Games gold.

But, while Hoy and Pendleton represent Great British cycling's present and past, a new star 20-year-old Laura Trott represents its present and future.

Trott became a double Olympic champion at the age of just 20 today after clocking 35.110 to win the 500m time trial and sneak the omnium by a single point from American Sarah Hammer.

This truly is indeed a golden era for Great Britain - and not just in cycling, of course.

For, if Hoy had raced on another day, the two Brownlee brothers - Alistair and Jonny - would have dominated tomorrow's headlines after their gold and bronze in the triathlon at Hyde Park.

Competition favourite Alistair completed the gruelling combination of a 1:46.25 in to win from Spaniard Javier Gomez. Alistair's younger sibling Jonny took bronze after finishing in 1:46.56.

Alistair's win was Great Britain's 19th gold medal of London 2012, equalling the haul from four years ago in Beijing.

A few hours later, that record was inevitably broken as Laura Bechtolsheimer on Mistral Hojris, Carl Hester on Uthopia, and Charlotte Dujardin on Valegro, won gold in the team dressage final, ahead of Germany.

The Greenwich Park success also meant Britain had won medals in all three equestrian disciplines - eventing, dressage and show jumping - at the same Olympics for the first time ever.

And so, contrary to popular belief, it is not only in cycling or rowing that Britain wins - although it is clear that those two sports are very important.

Other medals today came from Nick Dempsey who won silver in the RS:X windsurfing class while, in the evening athletics session, Robbie Grabarz grabbed a bronze in the high jump, clearing 2.29m.

Grabarz's medal was Great Britain's 48th, and significant because it surpassed the total number of medals won by GB in Beijing (47), and matched the minimum target set by UK Sport for these Games.

Indeed, with five days left, and another five medals guaranteed from the latter stages of the boxing - as well as at least another silver coming from the sailing 470 class - Team GB looks set to smash its target.

Let me emphasise again - this is truly historic stuff. Only in London 1908 has Britain ever had a better Games record.

Back then, as hosts, the British and Irish team carried off 56 golds and 146 medals overall.

However, this was at a time when visiting athletes still travelled by boat and, consequently, home advantage was huge - both in terms of the quantity of competitors present (almost a third) and also their fitness.

Now, in the present day again, this historic Olympic Games for Britain was always going to produce one overriding figurehead.

Among many others, the likes of Jessica Ennis, Bradley Wiggins, Mo Farah and Andy Murray have all delivered the most astonishing performances and produced the most amazing memories.

But, after his achievements tonight and over the past decade generally, this history man of London 2012 simply must be the Real McHoy, Sir Chris Hoy.


BRITAIN'S GREATEST OLYMPIANS
Blue highlight = member of Team GB at London 2012
Rank
GSBTot
1Sir Chris Hoy (cycling)6107
2Sir Steve Redgrave (rowing)5106
3Bradley Wiggins (cycling)4127
4Ben Ainslie (sailing)4105
5Sir Matthew Pinsent (rowing)4004
5Paulo Radmilovic (water polo)4004
7Jack Beresford (rowing)3205
8Jason Kenny (cycling)3104
9Henry Taylor (swimming)3025
10Reginald Doherty (tennis)3014


MEDAL TABLE (Day 11, 22:29PM)
RankCountryGSBTotal
1CHINA (CHN)34211873
2United States (USA)30192170
3Great Britain & NI (GBR)22131348
4South Korea (KOR)125623
5Russian Federation (RUS)10182048
6France (FRA)891128
7Italy (ITA)76417
8Germany (GER)614727
9Kazakhstan (KAZ)6017
10Netherlands (NED)53614
11Australia (AUS)412925
12Iran (IRN)4318
13Hungary (HUN)4239
14North Korea (PRK)4015
15Cuba (CUB)3317
16Belarus (BLR)3238
17New Zealand (NZL)3159
18South Africa (RSA)3104
19Ukraine (UKR)3069
20Japan (JPN)2131429
21Romania (ROU)2529
22Denmark (DEN)2428
23Poland (POL)2158
23Brazil (BRZ)2158
25Jamaica (JAM)2114
26Croatia (CRO)2103
27Ethiopia (ETH)2024
28Spain (ESP)1416
29Canada (CAN)13711
30Sweden (SWE)1337
31Czech Republic (CZE)1315
32Kenya (KEN)1225
33Slovenia (SLO)1124
34Georgia (GEO)1113
35Dominican Republic (DOM)1102
35Switzerland (SUI)1102
37Lithuania (LIT)1012
38Venezuela (VEN)1001
38Algeria (ALG)1001
38Grenada (GRN)1001
41Mexico (MEX)0325
42Colombia (COL)0314
43Egypt (EGY)0202
44Slovakia (SVK)0134
45India (IND)0123
45Azerbaijan (AZE)0123
45Belgium (BEL)0123
45Armenia (ARM)0123
49Mongolia (MGL) 0112
49Norway (NOR)0112
49Indonesia (INA) 0112
49Serbia (SBR)0112
49Tunisia (TUN)0112
49Estonia (EST)0112
55Cyprus (CYP)0101
55Finland (FIN)0101
55Guatemala (GUA)0101
55Malaysia (MAS)0101
55Thailand (THA)0101
55Chinese Taipei (TPE)0101
61Greece (GRE)0022
61Moldova (MDA)0022
61Singapore (SIN)0022
61Qatar (QAT)0022
65Uzbekistan (UZB)0011
65Hong Kong (HKG)0011
65Argentina (ARG)0011
65Kuwait (KUW)0011
65Morocco (MAR)0011
65Puerto Rico (PUR)0011
65Saudi Arabia (KSA)0011
65Trinidad & Tobago (TRI)0011
65Turkey (TUR)0011