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Lizzie Deignan to call upon "racing instinct" during battle with Dutch

Lizzie Deignan to call upon
© Reuters
The London 2012 road race silver medallist is competing in her third Olympics.

Lizzie Deignan is clear that the only way she can win Sunday's Olympic road race is to be prepared to lose it.

Deignan will race in her third Olympics this weekend when she tackles the 136km route to the Fuji International Speedway.

Having finished second to Marianne Vos in London in 2012 and fifth when Anna van der Breggen took gold in Rio five years ago, Deignan finds herself facing the eternal question – how do you beat the Dutch?

London Olympic Games – Day 2
Marianne Vos (left) pipped Deignan, then Armitstead, to victory in London on 2012 (John Giles/PA)

Both Vos and Van der Breggen will be on the start line on Sunday, joined in the Dutch squad by former world champion Annemiek van Vleuten and rising star Demi Vollering.

"You guys need to tell me," Deignan said with a laugh when asked how to take them on.

"I simply have to be willing to lose in order to win. I can't follow every move the Dutch make. I have to be really selective and the only way I can do that is just rely on racing instinct. Overthinking it can put me in trouble."

Deignan – then Armitstead – was beaten by Vos in a sprint in London but said her silver "felt like gold" on Olympic debut at the age of 23.

But four years later it was a different experience. Only days before the race in Rio news broke that Deignan had been cleared to compete by the Court of Arbitration for Sport as it emerged she had been suspended for the previous month for missing three drugs tests in one year.

Rio Olympic Games 2016 – Day Two
Deignan finished fifth in the Rio road race, days after being cleared to race following a suspension (Mike Egerton/PA)

The whereabouts failures could have resulted in a four-year ban, but Deignan successfully argued the first one was not her fault and was cleared to race.

Deignan competed in Brazil with the weight of the world on her shoulders but flew to Japan last week in a very different place.

Having become a mum in 2018, the 32-year-old has returned to the top of her sport, taking a string of victories in the years since – most recently at the Tour de Suisse in June.

"Personally and professionally I'm in a totally different place," Deignan said of Rio. "I got married, had a child and lived through a pandemic, so I think my perspective on the importance of being here is different.

"I'm still very focused, I still want to win, but my ability to have perspective on where it stands in my life is very different.

"I'm just happy to be here and happy that I've got the opportunity to do my job and to race. Not everyone is in that situation so I'm feeling very relaxed and optimistic."

Only 67 riders will start Sunday's race, barely half the number competing in the men's race on Saturday due to the qualification process – although cycling's governing body the UCI has promised to address the imbalance before the Paris Games in 2024.

Though many of the changes have been a long time coming, the steps being made to improve equality are now coming thick and fast – making it harder for a rider like Deignan to know when might be the time to put the bike away.

"I'm starting to feel old because everyone is asking me about retirement," Deignan said.

"I don't know is the honest answer. I feel fortunate that I've continued my career further than I thought because of the opportunities that Trek-Segafredo have given me so it depends.

"We've got the Women's Tour de France next year, that's a huge opportunity and women's cycling is growing and growing.

"Whenever I decide to walk away it'll be a hard decision because there are so many more opportunities on the horizon."

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Olympic medal table header
CountryGold medalSilver MedalBronze MedalT
ChinaChina23141350
United StatesUnited States20211657
JapanJapan175931
AustraliaAustralia1431431
Olympics flagOlympic Athletes from Russia12191344
Great BritainGreat Britain10101232
Today's Olympic highlights header

Sunday's key events


GOLF
· The men's golf reaches its conclusion, with plenty of players still in medal contention. Home favourite Hideki Matsuyama is one shot off Xander Schauffele's lead, while Great Britain's Paul Casey is another shot further back and Tommy Fleetwood is also in the mix (11.30pm-8am)

CYCLING - BMX
· Great Britain have already made history in the BMX events in Tokyo, something Charlotte Worthington and Declan Brooks will be looking to add to in the women's (2.10am) and men's (3.10am) freestyle finals

SWIMMING
· The final day of swimming action begins with the men's 50m freestyle final. Ben Proud could add to a medal-laden Games in the pool for Team GB so far, although he is up against USA's Caeleb Dressel, who is going for his fourth gold in Tokyo (2.30am)
· From sprint to endurance, Great Britain's second medal hope of the day comes through Daniel Jervis in the men's 1500m freestyle final (2.44am)
· Team GB will again be among the heavy favourites for gold in the last swimming event of the Games - the men's 4x100m medley relay final - having won the mixed event in a world record time on Saturday (3.36am)

BOXING
· Already guaranteed at least a bronze, Pat McCormack takes part in the men's welterweight semi-final against Ireland's Aidan Walsh with a spot in the gold medal final at stake (4.03am)
· Ben Whittaker is also in the semi-finals of the men's light heavyweight and will be looking to continue Team GB's success in the ring (4.51am)

TENNIS
· There will be a surprise on the top of the men's tennis podium after Novak Djokovic missed out on a medal altogether. Alexander Zverev takes on Karen Khachanov in the second match on Centre Court at the Ariake Tennis Park (7am-2pm)

SAILING
· Alison Young will be going for gold in the women's laser radial medal race (7.33am)

ARTISTIC GYMNASTICS
· Team GB's Max Whitlock will look to defend his 2016 Olympic title in the men's pommel horse final (10.41am)

ATHLETICS
· The men's high jump final includes GB's Tom Gale, although his chances of a medal look bleak (11.10am)
· So often the blue-riband event of the Olympics, the men's 100m final takes place as the world's fastest bid to be crowned Usain Bolt's successor. Three Brits have made it into the semi-finals (11.15am-11.32am), and the final looks wide open after an underwhelming display by favourite Trayvon Bromell on Saturday (1.50pm)

HOCKEY
· Great Britain face India in the men's quarter-final (1pm)

> Today's schedule in full
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