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A sad day for track cycling!<?: prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

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IOC turns track events upside down

By: Susan Westemeyer

Published: December 10, 16:44,

Updated: December 10, 16:03

 

Individual pursuit, points race, Madison out of the Olympics

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has approved massive changes in the track cycling events for the London 2012 games, eliminating the 4000 metre individual pursuit, points race and Madison from the programme.

The London games will now feature five men's and five women's events, as proposed by the International Cycling Union (UCI) as part of a gender-equality plan, according to the Associated Press. The 2008 Beijing games had seven men's events and three women's events.

"The changes reflect the IOC's desire to continually refresh the program, as well as its commitment to increase women's participation," the IOC said in a statement on the last day of its executive board meeting.

Under the new plan, there will be 84 women track cyclists in London, or 45 percent, as compared to 35 riders, or 19 percent, in Beijing 2008.

The new plan has events for both sexes in the individual sprint, team sprint, keirin, team pursuit and the omnium. The latter is a five-race event which includes a 3km individual pursuit, 200 metre sprint, 1km time trial, 15km points race and a 5km scratch race.

There has been massive protest against the changes, which affect among others, American Taylor Phinney and Briton Bradley Wiggins.

Briton Rebecca Romero, who is current Olympic champion in the women's individual pursuit, had announced her dissatisfaction with the plan before the announcement was made. ?I'm all in favour of moving to achieve parity between men and women but there must be a better solution," she said. "This is a major culling. There's got to be something better."

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Posted

Industry responds to IOC?s track decision

By:

Cycling News

Published:

December 11, 11:21,

Updated:

December 11, 00:59

Olympic revamp receives mixed response

The International Olympic Committee?s (IOC) ratification of radical changes to the Olympic Games track programme has received a mixed response from national federations and riders alike. Decisions that create winners and losers within the same sport is likely always going to receive a mixed response, which is exactly what arrived from the cycling industry following yesterday?s IOC meeting.

British Cycling?s performance director Dave Brailsford praised the IOC?s changes, which eliminate the individual pursuit, points race and Madison.

"The issue of gender inequality within the Olympic track cycling events needed to be resolved and in that regard, I think the IOC move is to be applauded,? said Brailsford. ?The detail of how the parity could be achieved was by adding or removing events and there were always going to be winners and losers.

?It's a shame to have lost great events such as the Individual pursuit, points and madison, however I believe the UCI have been very creative to include the omnium within which the individual pursuit and the points race will still figure," he added.

The decision is a double-edged sword for Brailsford, as it is for many of this colleagues at other national federations. While male and female track athletes will contend for an equal number of medals at the London 2012 Olympic Games, Brailsford?s individual pursuit champions Bradley Wiggins and Rebecca Romero will not be able to defend their respective Olympic titles on home turf.

"There didn't need to be such a massive overhaul," Romero told Radio 5 Live. "This is a massive overhaul of the Olympic track programme which will have massive consequences for the sport.

A world away in New Zealand BikeNZ high performance director Mark Elliott is wrestling with the same conundrum. Three of the nation?s five Olympic track medals have come from the individual pursuit, and in Alison Shanks the nation also has the reigning International Cycling Union (UCI) World Champion.

?It?s disappointing from the viewpoint of endurance track that the blue ribbon event of individual pursuit has gone along with the points race and Madison,? said Elliott. ?That said the even gender split is commendable and BikeNZ is well placed in regards to the women?s team pursuit with our team picking up the silver medal at the world championships this year. Our power to podium programme has identified a group of talented women and we have been developing them for a year now.

?It?s a disappointment for Alison Shanks as the reigning world champion, but let?s remember that we still have the world championships in all of these disciplines every year,? he said. ?And for us to have a successful teams pursuit programme we must have world class individual pursuit riders. The focus for us now will be to have balance across world championship outcomes and our Olympic outcomes."

Like Australia, New Zealand is both a winner and a loser from the IOC?s decision, with both nations having good prospects in the axed programmes and the introduced omnium.

The Commonwealth nations have an added complication in that the changes made by the IOC don?t impact the Commonwealth Games, which will be staged in India next year. Commonwealth countries will have added motivation to continue track programs in the culled areas to ensure success at the Commonwealth Games events.

Tweet all about it

Here?s what track riders ? past and present ? had to say on their Twitter.com accounts.

Chris Boardman: Individual Pursuit out of the Olympics....booooo. My World record might stand forever...yeeeea!

Taylor Phinney: Well family, it seems that we have been unsuccessful in our fight. I dearly appreciate all your support! We now move on.

Greg Henderson: It is a shame, in my opinion, that track endurance is ruined now in future Olympics.

Jesse Sergent: Today is a sad day for endurance track cycling.

Follow Cyclingnews on Twitter for the very latest coverage of events taking place in the cycling world - twitter.com/cyclingnewsfeed

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