You're reading: Britain dominates Olympic track cycling program

LONDON — The phrase floated around by British Cycling is "marginal gains."

Everyone
associated with the most dominant program in track cycling, when asked
for the secret to their success, says the exact same thing: It’s paying
attention to details, maximizing training time, taking advantage of
every bit of technology at their disposal.

The result has been another gold medal bonanza at the velodrome.

Chris
Hoy and Laura Trott added two more to Britain’s total Tuesday, the
final day before the Olympic cycling program shifts to BMX. Victoria
Pendleton added a silver medal to the loot, leaving the tally at seven
golds, a silver and a bronze out of a possible 10 medals.

“It’s
everything, really,” said Hoy, whose victory in the keirin was also his
sixth Olympic gold medal, a British record. “You can say it’s the home
advantage, it’s the crowd, it’s the Olympic Games and we’ve timed it
perfectly. It’s a very measurable sport, cycling.”

And make no mistake, the British measure everything.

They
measure the cadence, torque and power output of the riders. They
measure their calorie intake and how much sleep they get. They measure
their time on their feet — Hoy joked that he often wonders whether it’s
worth it when he has to climb up a flight of stairs.

It’s other
details, too: Made-to-order shoes, bringing their own hypoallergenic
sheets to the athletes’ village to ward off sickness, their so-called
“hot pants” that warm riders’ legs to the optimal temperature before a
race, and the uber-detailed video analysis of past performances.

Rival
teams have accused the British team of having “magic wheels” — why else
would they quickly cover them up after races? — and other advantages,
despite no real evidence to support the claims.

“It’s a natural
reaction when you get beaten to point the finger and say, ‘You have the
advantage,'” Hoy said. “If we don’t perform well, instead of looking at
someone else, we look at ourselves and say, ‘What can we do to make
amends?'”

Britain’s cycling success this summer began in earnest
with Bradley Wiggins’ triumph in the Tour de France, but it really
picked up speed when Elizabeth Armitstead delivered a silver medal in
the Olympic road race and Wiggins won gold in last week’s time trial.

Their momentum carried right over onto the track.

Despite
facing the tall order of matching its seven gold medals from the
Beijing Games, the British team dominated the program from start to
finish, setting eight world records along the way.

Gold medals in
the men’s and women’s team pursuit, and in the men’s team sprint.
Victories for Jason Kenny in the individual sprint, Trott in the
multidiscipline omnium, Pendleton in the women’s keirin and Hoy in the
men’s version of the same unpredictable event.

Pendleton’s silver
in the women’s sprint, the final event of her cycling career, and Ed
Clancy’s bronze in the omnium gave Britain nine track medals in total.

“I
can’t believe how dominant we’ve been,” Trott said. “We only lost three
events, which isn’t bad, because I know everybody was thinking, ‘They
aren’t going to match what they did in Beijing.'”

Almost on cue, Trott launched into a dialogue about “marginal gains.”

“We
look at the minor details and how we can improve, and new equipment,”
she said. “We did stuff like that before the Games and developed that
before the Games. Other people try to do it right, like, the few months
before, and we’ve been developing it for years. That’s why we are so
dominant.

“We look at everything, every tiny issue like how tight your bloody overshoe is, and that’s why.”

Perhaps no other day summed up the dominance like Tuesday.

Trott
needed to beat Sarah Hammer of the United States by at least three
positions in the 500-meter time trial, the final event of the six-event
omnium, to surpass her for the gold medal.

Trott won the race and Hammer finished in fourth.

Hoy
also found himself trailing on the final lap of the eight-lap keirin,
but used a charge that almost seemed unfair to speed past his German
rival Maximilian Levy for the gold medal.

The only thing that
didn’t go right for Britain came in the women’s sprint, when Pendleton
beat Anna Meares in the opener of the best-of-three finals. Pendleton
came out of the sprinting lane and was relegated, and Meares won the
second race to snatch the gold medal.

Still, even that didn’t sour
the mood of the British fans who packed into the velodrome, and it
certainly didn’t take any shine off the performance of the home nation.

“The
performance of the British team has been tremendous,” said UCI
president Pat McQuaid, arguably the most powerful man in cycling. “It’s
natural questions will be asked. I’ve heard answers from various people
(on the British team) and I agree completely with them.”

Cue the head of cycling’s world governing body to talk about “marginal gains” one more time.

“I’ve
followed this journey since 1998 of the British Cycling federation,”
McQuaid said. “I was there in Sydney, Athens, Beijing. I’ve seen the
progress and it’s not a surprise.”