Cycling - Wiggins vows to turn tables on Australia in Rio
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain can turn the tables on arch-rivals Australia and win the team pursuit title at the Rio Olympics after being edged out at the world championships on Thursday, Bradley Wiggins said.
The 35-year-old former Tour de France champion, back to his track roots as he sets his sights on crowning his career with a fifth Olympic title, looked the strongest of Britain's quartet in a thrilling showdown in the London velodrome.
He never wavered throughout the punishing 4,000m race but the gamble to draft in double Olympic champion Ed Clancy for the final, just weeks after being laid flat out by a back injury, backfired as he cracked two laps from the end.
Jonathan Dibben had already been dropped while Australia's foursome stayed together until the end as they claimed a sixth world title in the event in the past 11 years.
"It's disappointing but you have to look at where we have come from with Ed especially, and we are close," Wiggins, who became the first Briton to win the Tour de France in 2012 when he also won the Olympic road time trial, told reporters.
"I've not seen the video back but it was close. We were there with them. We knew we would have a race on here with them and we will have a race on in Rio and I think we'll get over the line first there."
RIO TEAM
Britain's team manager Shane Sutton, a stalwart throughout Wiggins' career, had told him he had to prove his worth at the worlds if he wanted to make the Rio team.
After three strong rides it looks certain Wiggins will get the chance to claim an eighth Olympic medal, 12 years after winning the individual pursuit gold in Athens.
"I had a chat with Shane afterwards. Individually it's the strongest series of team pursuiting I've ever done," said Wiggins, who left Team Sky last year to set up his own team.
"When I won in (team pursuit) in Beijing I was just a passenger doing one-lap turns and dropping off the pace.
"This is the strongest I've ever been in team pursuit so there's a bit of life left in me yet."
He said the key to Olympic success will be having four men at the finish, although he attached no blame for Thursday's disappointment at the door of 30-year-old Clancy.
"Ed was the weakest link in the trio at the end," he said. "But the fact he returned here was against all the medical team's advice. At Christmas Ed was being driven to the track lying down in the back of the van because he couldn't stand up."
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; editing by Ken Ferris)