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Dramatic day at the Izu velodrome as Great Britain's team pursuit reign ends

Dramatic day at the Izu velodrome as Great Britain's team pursuit reign ends
© Reuters
The best Britain can hope for now in the event is seventh place.

Great Britain's 13-year reign as Olympic men's team pursuit champions came to an end on a day of drama, intrigue and a snap retirement at the Izu velodrome.

It began with three-time Olympic champion Ed Clancy abruptly calling time on his career through injury, continued with allegations that world champions Denmark were cheating and then – in a first round clash with those same Danes – ended with a bizarre crash between Frederik Madsen and Charlie Tanfield.

The best Britain can hope for now in the event is seventh place, but the arguments will surely go on.

Denmark's kit first came under scrutiny on Monday, when they were seen with all four riders sporting medical tape on their shins – an apparent breach of UCI regulations stating riders cannot wear anything that does not constitute the tightly-controlled clothing.

Performance director Stephen Park confirmed Britain had been one of "several" teams to call for the Danes to be disqualified, having set their opening time while wearing both the controversial tape and undervests which had not been properly registered.

At a lively meeting of teams before Tuesday's session, the UCI confirmed the equipment could not be used again but indicated there would be no retroactive punishment despite rules saying a team should face elimination in such circumstances.

"There was a fairly heated debate about whether the UCI were or were not going to apply their own rules about (the tape) and about undervests," Park said.

The argument threatened to turn petty. All equipment used must have been commercially available since January 1. Though the Danish undervest is for sale and appears to have been so for some time, Park claimed others had discovered the source code of the relevant website had recently been changed.

"The information relating to the kit being available on January 1 was only added in the last 24 hours," he said.

Charlie Tanfield and Frederik Madsen crash
Charlie Tanfield and Frederik Madsen crashed (Danny Lawson/PA)

Park left open the possibility of further appeals, but by the end of the day it would make little difference to Britain.

Tanfield was rushed into action as a late substitute for Clancy. For all the millions spent and the years of preparation for this day, Britain went into their first round clash with a rider who had spent two and a half hours of Monday riding his road bike, no thought apparently given to this scenario.

It was therefore little surprise to see Tanfield struggle to keep up once Britain were reduced to three. That said, it clearly shocked Madsen, who was in his aero tuck and did not realise he had caught Tanfield until he rode into his back wheel and both men hit the deck.

The UCI deliberated for 30 minutes over what happened next.

Britain's men's endurance coach Iain Dyer argued a precedent was set at the Nations Cup in St Petersburg last month, where Swiss rider Claudio Imhof rode into Davide Plebani in an individual pursuit and was disqualified for causing a crash.

But instead the UCI declared that Denmark had won the race by catching Britain's last rider – rules state a pursuit is over once a team gets within one metre of their opponents, a measure seemingly met if they collide.

It was all a deeply unsatisfactory way for Britain to hand over their crown, but debates over the rules seem like a distraction given their best time was five seconds off the new world record set by Italy later in the day.

Dyer insisted Monday's qualifying time – though almost three seconds better than any previous British ride in competition – was still well short of their best in practice, but that too was academic in the end.

"We would have been right at the sharp end for sure," Dyer said. "But that's just ifs and buts. You've got to deliver on the day."

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Silver medallists Ryan Owens of Britain, Jack Carlin of Britain and Jason Kenny of Britain celebrate on the podium on August 3, 2021
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rhs 2.0
Olympic medal table header
CountryGold medalSilver MedalBronze MedalT
ChinaChina34241775
United StatesUnited States30352792
JapanJapan22101547
Great BritainGreat Britain17182055
AustraliaAustralia1762043
Today's Olympic highlights header

Friday's key events


HOCKEY
· Great Britain's women aim to secure their place on the podium as they face India in the bronze medal match (2.30am)
· Netherlands - silver medallists five years ago - and Argentina battle for the gold medal in the women's final (11am)

BEACH VOLLEYBALL
· The women's gold medal will be decided as Australia and USA go head to head (3.30am)

BOXING
· Lauren Price will be looking to add to Team GB's success in the ring when she takes on Nouchka Fontijn of Netherlands in the women's middleweight semi-final (6am)

DIVING
· Tom Daley already has one Olympic gold to his name in Tokyo, and he begins his bid for second in the men's 10m platform. Teammate Noah Williams is also involved in the preliminary round (7am)

CYCLING
· Jason Kenny's reign as sprint king may be over, but Jack Carlin looked strong in his bid to succeed his compatriot. He takes on Harrie Lavreysen in his sprint semi-final (8.10am), with the final taking place later in the day (10.35am)
· The women's madison makes its Olympic debut at the velodrome as Team GB duo Katie Archibald and Laura Kenny look to add another medal to their collections (9.15am)

FOOTBALL
· Hosts Japan will look to get themselves on the podium as they face Mexico in the men's bronze medal match (10am)
· The women's champions will be crowned as both Sweden and Canada aim to win Olympic gold for the very first time (1pm)

ATHLETICS
· The men's 5000m final includes Great Britain's Andrew Butchart, but most eyes will be on Ugandan world record holder Joshua Cheptegei (1pm)
· Team GB's Jodie Williams will hope to get on the podium in the women's 400m final, but defending champ Shaunae Miller-Uibo is favourite for gold while Stephenie Ann McPherson should challenge and Allyson Felix is bidding to become the most decorated female track and field athlete of all time (1.35pm)
· Netherlands' Sifan Hassan takes on leg two of her ambitious attempt at a Tokyo treble in a women's 1500m final which also includes Great Britain's Laura Muir and Faith Kipyegon of Kenya (1.50pm)
· A star-studded women's 4x100m relay final will see a Team GB quartet including Dina Asher-Smith look to upset defending champions USA and favourites Jamaica, who boast Elaine Thompson-Herah as she goes for her third gold of the Games (2.30pm)
· Great Britain and Jamaica will also be going for gold in the men's 4x100m relay final, and their medal hopes have been boosted by USA's failure to qualify (2.50pm)

> Today's schedule in full
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