S
SEARCH
M
SW
Saturday, August 7
Collect News Data

Ed Clancy admits he would relish a role within British Cycling

:Headline: Ed Clancy admits he would relish a role within British Cycling:
Ed Clancy retired from competing midway through the men's team pursuit on Tuesday.
Sports Mole

Ed Clancy hopes to stay involved with British Cycling following his sudden retirement through injury at the Tokyo Olympics.

A day after pulling out of the Games midway through the men's team pursuit, the three-time Olympic champion was back at the Izu velodrome to cheer on his team-mates, who knew they could finish no higher than seventh but at least signed off with a new British record time of three minutes 45.636 seconds.

The 36-year-old joked that he had "dried his eyes" after the emotions of Tuesday, when an outpouring of tributes on social media and beyond had left the Yorkshireman humbled.

Clancy cited a long-standing back injury in announcing his exit, saying Monday's qualifying had shown him it would be better for someone else to step in. Twenty-four hours later, he had no regrets.

"It was an emotional day, it was always going to be, especially the way it happened, being here under the lights as well," he said. "It's not like announcing it in the middle of October but I feel good today and I still feel it was the right thing to do."

The announcement turned Clancy into an observer for a wild afternoon on Tuesday, when Britain's hopes of defending the title they had held since 2008 ended in a day of intrigue and drama that culminated in his replacement in the team, Charlie Tanfield, being struck from behind by Denmark's Frederik Madsen.

"I thought I'd seen it all until I was stood up there watching the Danish team pursuit crash into the back of Charlie and I honestly had to have a bit of a double take," he said.

Britain's team pursuiters signed off with a new national record as they finished seventh in competition on Wednesday (Danny Lawson/PA)

But though the British team pursuit squad will leave Tokyo feeling they did not manage to deliver their best time, once he had seen Italy take gold in a new world record of 3:42.032, Clancy conceded they were never going to be able to compete for the title.

"Honestly, no," he said. "Not this time. We'd have perhaps been in the medals but I honestly don't think we'd have been good enough to do that, that is the truth and that's alright.

"If we are going to move forward and do something about this, we need to start off with the willingness to accept that there are other teams out there doing what we do better than us right now.

"It is not through a lack of commitment, on the riders or the staff. We need to have a willingness to accept that there's people doing it better. The second thing we need to do is have a look at the key facts and data and act upon it and do it quick because Paris is not that far away."

body check tags ::

amp_article__458047 : Collect and Make Data not in DataBase  : 
last updated article - 2021-08-04 12:40:44:
html db last update - 2021-08-04 12:34:09 :

ex - 7200 : read : write cache and make html

Click here for more stories about Ed Clancy

Share this article now:

Subscribe to our Newsletter


Transfer Talk Daily
Match previews - twice weekly
Morning Briefing (7am UTC)
UC
Get the latest transfer news, match previews and news direct to your inbox!
Recommended Next on SM
Jason Kenny concedes that Jack Carlin is carrying Team GB's sprint medal hopes
Chelsea 'closing in on big-money Romelu Lukaku deal'
Lionel Messi deal 'would end PSG interest in Paul Pogba'
Matt Walls and Ethan Hayter claim silver after strong finish in men's Madison

Subscribe to our Newsletter


Transfer Talk Daily
Match previews - twice weekly
Morning Briefing (7am UTC)
UC
Get the latest transfer news, match previews and news direct to your inbox!

Loading ...

Failed to load data.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
X

We value your privacy

A part of our GDPR compliance we need to ask for your consent. We and our partners use technology such as cookies on Sports Mole to personalise content and ads, provide social media features, and analyse our traffic. Click below to consent to the use of this technology on Sports Mole.