Tuesday, July 30, 1996

Sydor happy with Silver

By JIM O'LEARY -- Executive Producer SLAM! Sports
 ATLANTA -- When Alison Sydor was three she hopped on the oversized bike of the boy next door and, to everyone's shock, rode it effortlessly.
 That was 26 years and many racing victories ago. Yesterday, Sydor was the odds-on pick to culminate years of cycling excellence by winning the first-ever Olympic gold medal in cross-country cycling.
 But on a day when the sun was almost hot enough to smoulder the rubber on her tires, the North Vancouver racer encountered one cool Italian.
 Paola Pezzo handled the heat and the hills with equal aplomb, winning the gold with surprising ease. Sydor battled hard to win the silver, finishing ahead of American Susan DeMattie.
 "I'm not disappointed at all,'' Sydor said. "The Italians focussed their entire season on this race. They put a lot of pressure on themselves to do well and Paula came through. She had an awesome day.''
 The other Canadian in the field, Lesley Tomlinson of Vancouver, fell and skinned a leg. But she got back on her bike and finished the race, placing 13th.
 Pezzo covered the 19.8-mile course in 1:50.50, coasting over the last couple kilometres to beat Sydor by 67 seconds. Sydor admitted that her day was less than "awesome.'' She pretty much conceded the gold midway through the race when Pezzo put her feet to the pedals to take an insurmountable lead.
 "When Paola went by me there was no one who could keep up with her,'' Sydor said.
 Sydor was philosophical about the silver. Yes, the gold was her objective, but she was proud of the race she cycled after it became apparent the Italian would be unbeatable.
 When Pezzo pulled away, she left Sydor in a three-man pack with DeMattie and Rita Dahle of Norway. It was obvious that one of the three women would miss the medals and Sydor was determined that it wouldn't be her.
 The trio stayed packed together, with Sydor in front, until there was about 6.5 kilometres to the finish. That's when Sydor made her move. She dug in to surge up a hill and, when she noticed that her two competitors failed to match her push, the started to feel comfortable about her medal chances.
 "When I made that little effort on the hill and the other two weren't able to match it, i was confident I could give my maximum effort for the rest of the race,'' she said. "I just put my head down and counted the hills to the finish.''
 Placing second wasn't what Sydor had in mind when she came to Atlanta. She has been the winningest mountain biker in the world the past two years, winning the 1995 world championship and six of the first seven World Cup races this year. She came to Atlanta on a gold hunt.
 "I thought I'd be disappointed but I'm not,'' she said. "At the very start I knew I wasn't having an awesome day. Paola has beaten me a number of times in World Cup races. I wasn't surprised that she won. She was one of the favorites going in.''
 The heat, in the mid-90s, made the race torture for the competitors. Many experienced cramping and a dehydrated Japanese rider was taken away on a stretcher after collapsing at the finish.
 "Everybody knew it would be bad,'' Sydor said. "We only see this type of heat and humidity a couple times a year. I felt uncomfortable from start to finish.''
 Sydor will take a short holiday and then return to the World Cup circuit for
 the series final in Hawaii in September. Then she's off to Australia two weeks later to defend her world championship title.
 
 
 


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