Special report: 2008 Olympic Games
¡¡By sportswriter Xin jianqiang
BEIJING, July 21 (Xinhua) -- After becoming the first
British woman to win the world sprint title in Los Angeles in 2005, track
cyclist Victoria Pendleton, 27, has quite a collection of golds, including five
in the 2007 and 2008 World Track Championships.
Now the most important target of the Queen of Track
Sprinting, the title given by her fans, is to win an Olympic gold next month in
Beijing.
 |
|
Britain's Victoria Pendleton reacts
after winning gold in the women's sprint on the fourth day of competition
at the track cycling world championships in Manchester, northern England,
March 29, 2008.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
"To be the best at something. It's all that I have
ever wanted since I was a child, to be really good at something, better than
everyone else, and this is my opportunity," Pendleton said earlier.
Born in Stotfold, Bedfordshire, she rode her first
race, a 400m event on the grass track at Fordham at the age of 9. Pendleton
showed her promise at the age of 13 and was spotted three years later by the
assistant national track coach, Marshal Thomas.
At that time she wanted to concentrate on her
education, and was later awarded with a degree in Sport and Exercise Science
from Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne.
At the 2005 World Championships, Pendleton won her
first major medal with a gold in the women's sprint. She became the third
British woman to become a cycling world champion in 40 years. At the 2006
Commonwealth Games, she won a silver in the 500m time trial and a gold in the
sprint in Melbourne.
At the 2007 UCI (International Cycling Union) Track
World Championships, she won the women's team sprint with Shanaze Reade, the
individual gold in the sprint, and a third gold in the Keirin.
She crowned this fantastic year off by being named
the Sunday Times Sportswoman of the Year for 2007, becoming the only cyclist to
win the award in its 20-year history.
Pendleton was also voted Sports Journalists'
Association of Britain's Sportswoman of the Year for 2007.
Helping her to win those stripes back are numerous
people including national sprint coach Iain Dyer, consultant coach and former
German star Jan van Eijden and in the gym Mark Simpson of the EIS.
Jan Van Eijden, the former world sprint champion has
impressed upon Pendleton that the winner is not always the rider who makes the
best moves, but the one who makes the fewest mistakes.
"Mark has been in control of my strength and
conditioning program for over a year now. Before him we had someone come in part
time but now I have full time one to one coaching, looking at every lift I do,
and that has helped a lot in my improvements," said Pendleton.
"We're also getting a lot of data coming from the
track too thanks to Scott in the EIS and we're hoping to use these to see the
relationships between gym and the data on the track and its going to be an
important part of our preparation for Beijing."
Now the slightly-built sprinter has cancelled all
media engagements over the last months to concentrate on her busy schedule for
the Beijing Olympic Games.
It's the sprint race in Beijing, the only Olympic
cycling sprint event that will define her sporting year.
She is believed a strong favourite for the 2008
Beijing Olympics after having considered retirement from the sport due to her
disastrous 2004 Summer Olympics where she finished 6th in the time trial and 9th
in the 200m sprint.
Her build-up to the Beijing Olympics has been boosted
by two gold medals at the 2008 UCI Track World Championships where she won the
women's sprint, and the women's team sprint. She was also second in the women's
keirin.
Women's sprint competition is expected to be really
difficult for anyone wanting to win it. The times from the top girls are now
very close and there are at least half a dozen riders capable of taking the
rainbow jersey home including Pendleton.
As seen in many a World Championship though, the
fastest rider in qualifying is not always the winner of the title and tactics
play a big part. And the British team are also making moves to help better
prepare their riders for that side of the event.
When talking about the Beijing Olympic Games,
Pendleton said, "There's not a lot I can do about it. All I can do is preparing
as well as I can.
"I am looking towards Beijing in a whole different
way. I want to make the most of it and enjoy being part of the whole Olympic
experience, because I didn't do that in Athens," Pendleton added.