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Sunday, October 1
Americans still humble about medal hopes


SYDNEY, Australia -- The American cyclists had a strong kick. By winning two medals on the final day of racing at the Sydney Olympics, they came through with as many medals as they'd predicted.

All of three.

Lance Armstrong won a bronze in the men's time trial and Mari Holden took silver in the women's event. Marty Nothstein took the match sprint gold earlier.

"You have to be realistic," said team leader Sean Petty, who had predicted three medals. "If people think three is low, they don't know hard it is to win a medal. We haven't medaled the last few years at the world championships. It's much more difficult at the Olympics."

Since winning nine cycling medals at the Soviet-boycotted Los Angeles Olympics in 1984, the Americans have been humbled. They landed one medal in Seoul, two in Barcelona and three in Atlanta.

As in previous Olympics, the U.S. cyclists watched a steady parade of Europeans march to the podium in Sydney. Still, there was plenty to celebrate.

Nothstein won the first American gold since 1904 in a non-boycotted Olympics. Chris Witty, on loan from the U.S. speedskating team, set an American record of 35.23 seconds to place fifth in the women's 500-meter time trial.

Armstrong, riding in his third Olympics, finally got the medal that had eluded him. And Holden's silver was a pure delight, an unexpected reward for her near-perfect effort.

"Every now and then, someone's going to pop a superlative effort and that's what Mari did," Petty said. "Overall, we had some other great efforts but we also had some bad luck along the way, this whole games."

Without question, the U.S. medal count would have been higher had things gone differently in a few events.

Nothstein, clearly the most dominant men's sprinter on the track, missed a second medal in the Keirin, finishing fifth. He was deliberately boxed out by a German, whose strategy placed his countryman on the podium.

Armstrong, the two-time Tour de France champion, was 13th in the road race after waiting too long to make his move. Holden and teammate Karen Kurreck, beset by mechanical problems and crashes, withdrew from the women's road race.

Alison Dunlap, ranked third in the world, finished seventh in the women's mountain bike race after crashing in a tricky rock groove. She was in second place at the time but, her pace disrupted, never recovered.

Jame Carney was third as the men's points race came to a close but made the wrong decision to coast with another rider on a late sprint lap. He rode a strong race, but the lapse dropped him to fifth.

Then there were some big letdowns.

The men's mountain bikers, their chances limited by poor start positions, never contended. The men's team pursuit squad flopped, ending Erin Hartwell's bid to become the first American cyclist to win medals at three straight Olympics.

Other riders, especially on the track, rode slower than expected.

"It was disappointing because no one rode to their potential," said Craig Griffin, coach of the U.S. endurance cyclists. "That's really it. There's no easy way to put it."

That begs a question. Where does the American cycling program, without the wider recruiting base or the higher national profile of European and Australian rivals, go from here?

"We have to focus on medal opportunities," Petty said. "Maybe it's not in every event, for the Olympics anyway. We'll look at the events we can invest in that are going to have a quicker and greater payoff at the Olympics."

Griffin said it's a challenge to train the team properly when many riders have professional contacts with trade teams. He spent only two weeks in May and June, then from mid-August to the Olympics, preparing the endurance riders.

"It's hard to deal with the pros," Griffin said. "When you have them, you have their commitment. But when you don't have them, you have to work around their commitments."

Looking ahead, the Americans hope Nothstein and Armstrong pursue the Athens Games. Perhaps U.S. Cycling will have Witty again after she competes in the Salt Lake Olympics, and team leaders are optimistic about many younger riders.

"We'll stem the leak, plug it and repair our system," Griffin said.



 


   
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