Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Wiggins to end Cycling career where it all began

-

RIO AFP JANEIRO, Aug13, 2016

Bradley Wiggins said he will finish his career where it all started after claiming a fifth Olympic title at the Rio Games.

The 36-year- old Briton won his eighth Olympic medal as the British track pursuit team stormed to a thrid straight Games gold, in a world record time to boot.

That eighth medal was a British record, taking Wiggins past the mark he had shared with fellow track cycling star Chris Hoy.

But it wasn't quite the 2012 Tour de France winner's swansong.

“I'm riding the Tour of Britain in two weeks time so I want to get back and keep riding my bike so that doesn't become a slog,” said Wiggins, whose last race will be the Six Days of Gent in November.

“Gent Six Days, which is where I wanted to end it -- my first memory as a child is being there with my dad when he was racing it.

“The place hasn't changed and it will be a nice end to my career, back where I was born, where it all started.” Wiggins has had a remarkable career between track and road cycling.

He was the first Briton to win the Tour de France, he holds the world hour record on the track, he was world and Olympic champion in the road time-trial, and he is a four-time Olympic champion on the track.

But he will not be trying to match Hoy's six gold medals.

The thought of the early morning training is enough to discourage any such folly.

“I'm not going to Tokyo, I'd love to but I wanted to finish on a high. I didn't want to go into another four-year cycle.

“The next two years would be horrible, going back to Manchester (where the national velodrome is located) and those early mornings in December with crap skin suits and crap helmets -- they only bring the nice kit out once every four years!”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka