Rio 2016: Crashes and late drama in women’s road race

Britain’s Lizzie Armistead missed out on a medal as Anna van der Breggen took gold

Anna van der Breggen of the Netherlands wins the women’s Road Cycling race of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at Fort Copacabana in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo: Peter Klaunzer/PA
Anna van der Breggen of the Netherlands wins the women’s Road Cycling race of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at Fort Copacabana in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo: Peter Klaunzer/PA

Lizzie Armitstead’s week of turmoil ended in Olympic disappointment at Copacabana beach as Holland’s Anna van der Breggen won a dramatic road race gold.

Embattled world champion Armitstead was given a Rio reprieve over three whereabouts ‘failures’ when the first was declared void by the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

But Britain’s first medallist of London 2012, with silver on The Mall behind Marianne Vos, could only finish fifth in the 137-kilometres road race.

Holland’s Annemiek van Vleuten led with less than 11km to go, but crashed dramatically on the descent which had ended men’s road race leader Vincenzo Nibali’s chances 24 hours earlier.

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That allowed Mara Abbott of the United States to take the lead, with Sweden’s Emma Johansson, Elisa Longo Borghini of Italy and Van der Breggen Holland in pursuit.

Abbott had an advantage of almost 40 seconds as the descent flattened out, but was caught in the final 200m and denied a medal.

Van der Breggen took gold, Johansson silver and Longo Borghini bronze.

It was agonising for Abbott as she missed out on a medal of any colour.

So too did Armitstead on a brutal course which was about survival of the fittest.

Armitstead, after being escorted by team officials to sign on for the start alongside her team-mates Emma Pooley and Nikki Harris, was cheered by a small throng of supporters waving Union Flags with “Team Armitstead” inscribed upon them and a banner on which “Go Lizzie” was written.

The 27-year-old from Otley had her sunglasses on her helmet and a steeliness about her eyes on her arrival at the start after a trying week.

Armitstead had been provisionally suspended by UK Anti-Doping on July 11 for three whereabouts ‘failures’.

CAS ruled in her favour, scrubbing the first ‘strike’ from her record, but her results will forever have an asterisk alongside in the eyes of many who believe she should not have been in Rio at all and should instead be serving a two-year suspension.

Questions remain, but Armitstead was unable to fan the flames of controversy by winning a medal.

The race was frenetic, relentless and full of attacking drama from the start, with Armitstead suffering a mechanical issue 11km in, only to rejoin the main bunch 5km later. Had the incident happened later, it would likely have seen her cut adrift.

The attacking intent was present on the two loops of the 24.7km Grumari Circuit and the peloton was strung out, but the elastic did not break.

Only when the bunch came on to the coastal road, with winds buffeting them from the Atlantic did a significant split happen, with around 40km to go.

Vos, Australia’s Gracie Elvin, Germany’s Trixi Worrack and France’s Pauline Ferrand Prevot were all involved in a seven-rider break.

The USA led the chase, but the escapees were over one minute ahead entering the concluding loop of the Vista Chinesa, where the race would be won.

The breakaway group fractured up the climb as the dwindling peloton caught up.

Three Americans and three Dutch riders were in the leading group.

Vos fell back, her domestique duty done, as the contenders were further whittled down.

Armitstead tried to time-trial up the climb, concentrating on her own tempo, as the gap to the leaders grew.

Van der Breggen and Van Vleuten were joined at the front of the race by Longo Borghini and Evelyn Stevens of the USA as South Africa’s Ashleigh Moolman-Pasio dropped back.

Van Vleuten made her move, with USA’s Mara Abbott tracking her.

Armitstead was 50 seconds adrift.

Johansson, Longo Borghini and Van der Breggen were ahead of the Briton in the second group, with the Dutchwoman not contributing to the chase as her team-mate was up ahead.

Then came the descent to the finish, which, for a second straight day, proved decisive.