Tuesday 14 August 2012

Did We Fail?

A Retrospective Look at Canadian Cycling at the London Olympics


Great expectations.

Canada’s top cyclists undoubtedly entered London poised for greatness.  They entered these games with World Champions and World Cup winners amongst their roster.  They were bold enough to predict not just three medals but that that was a conservative estimate.

Comparisons were made to the 1996 Games where Canadian cyclists won medals in all three cycling disciplines (BMX having not yet been added).  Tara Whitten had won three World Titles in the period since Beijing, and Catherine Pendrel has become the standard against which female mountain bike racers are measured.  Zach Bell was a contender, and who could forget, that Canada had something new – a Grand Tour Winner! While Ryder was outnumbered in the road race, surely he could be counted on to repeat his high pressure time trial performance of the Giro.  Clara Hughes, a Canadian sporting legend, had returned to the sport to fulfil her manifest destiny of becoming Canada’s most decorated Olympian.

And yet we fell short.

First Ryder crashed out of the Tour de France putting a cloud over his conditioning.

Then Hughes could not match the torrid pace of Kristin Armstrong- herself on a comeback from both having her first child and breaking her collarbone at the Exergy Tour.

Whitten fought a 6-round out and out war with the top athletes from Great Britton, Australia and the United States.  And lost.  So narrowly, heartbreakingly, lost.

And perhaps most inexplicably, Pendrel, Canada’s most consistent performer, an athlete with a history of rising to the occasion at the biggest events- just had an off day.  It’s something ordinary in bike racing, something that happens at some point to everyone that has ever raced a bike.  At any race on any given day there is always one favourite that falls short.  Catherine lined up, and it just wasn’t her day.  Pendrel, who rose to the occasion four years ago in Beijing to finish 4th, and who has gone from strength to strength ever since, faded badly on the open exposed course in Hadleigh Field to come 9th.  At just about any other race, in any other year, Pendrel and her coach Dan Proulx could just call it an outlier and move on- but unfortunately it happened on a day that only comes every four years.

Jacques Landry, the head of Cycling Canada, gave some sage words afterwards when he told the media to remember that both Pendrel and Whitten are World Champions.  And remain champions.  Fans of Canadian cycling can take pride in the way our athletes fought through adversity.  Perhaps there was no better example of this than Zach Bell, who when clearly not in the form that he had hoped to be, and with his medal ambitions slipping through his fingers, chose to go on the attack rather than concede defeat.  His win in the scratch race did little to help his overall placing- but it spoke volumes to his character.

Monique Sullivan, in her own quite and unassuming way, did what Olympians should do.  She fought uphill for two years to even qualify a spot at these games, and when she got the opportunity to come and compete put together some of the best races she has ever had.  She combined the grit, tactics, speed and aggression needed to make the keirin final- and in doing so earned the right to line up as one of the fastest 6 women in the world on two wheels.  There was no medal for her at the end of the day- but in making the final she rose to the challenge and embodied the Olympic ideal.

From Atlanta to London

There is no doubt that Canadian cyclists performed better in Atlanta than London.  The medals alone tell that story.

But there is another story, one where in London we have changed the markers for how we wish to be measured.  While every medal in Atlanta seemed to come with a story of an upset ride from an underdog (with perhaps the exception of Curt Harnett in the men’s sprint) Canada came to London hungry for more.  Results that had previously been seen as successes were seen as failures.  On the track Canada fielded riders in six events and were competitive in five.

We had riders that could win, and they were justifiably upset when they did not.

They were well supported, by systematic work that was done behind the scenes in the year leading up to the games to help ensure our riders had the best possible environments to perform.  Geoff Kabush, in riding to 8th place and Canada’s best ever men’s cross country results thanked Dan Proulx and the rest of the staff that made it possible.  Kabush has a pretty good frame of reference when it comes to Olympic performances. He set the previous benchmark twelve years ago in Sydney when he was 9th.

No where is this transformation seen more clearly than in the even where we did medal- in the inaugural Women’s Team Pursuit.  Four years ago when it was announced that this event would be included in the Olympics, key individuals chose to focus on it as an avenue for a medal.  A plan was laid out.  And it was followed up with training camps, a base in Los Angeles, added staff including physiotherapists and nutritionists, trips to the wind tunnel and efforts to procure the best equipment available.  And it paid dividends with a shinning set of bronze medals for three talented athletes. 

And in this lies the road to Rio- Canadian Cycling needs start planning now (other Nation’s already have), follow through and perhaps most importantly procure funding for it all.

And hopefully, somewhere in Canada, young kids have seen the efforts of Catherine, Monique, Zach, Tara and Geoff and through to themselves that just maybe one day they themselves can win.