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BMX World
Championships Media Release |
No: bmx1030 |
27
July 2010 |
Olympic qualifier
status adds pressure to UCI BMX World Champs
Pietermaritzburg - As the world marked the two year countdown to start of
the 2012 Olympic Games in London, the BMX community was coming to grips
with the added pressure of Olympic qualification at the UCI BMX World
Championships that get under way in Pietermaritzburg on Thursday 29 July.
The sports international governing body, the UCI, altered its
qualification rules to include the world championships, along with the
Supercross event that took place in Copenhagen, and the event that will
take place in Birmingham. The world championships however carries a much
higher weighting in that qualification process.
"There is no doubt the riders will be aware of the pressure because the
world championships is now really important for the Olympic qualification
process," said the UCI's head of gravity disciplines Johan Lindstrom.
32 men and 16 women will be qualified by nation for the 2012 showcase, and
the intensity is already obvious as the major international teams arrived
in South Africa with significantly better support and infrastructure than
ever before.
"I see it as an indicator of the success and growth of the sport," said
Lindstrom. "Just a few years ago, riders used to arrive at the world
champs pretty much on their own or with a coach. Now the major teams
travel with managers, physiotherapists, dieticians and mechanics. Some
even have travelling mental coaches as well."
"There are also a lot of High Performance coaches supporting national
teams, which is another measure of the growth of the sport," he added.
Lindstrom pointed out that the final qualification event in Birmingham may
have to serve as a tiebreaker event, should there be nations deadlocked on
Olympic qualification points.
"There is no doubt that the top riders are arriving here better prepared,
and there is real pressure on them to do well to put their countries in a
good position for Olympic qualification," said Lindstrom.
"The sport is functioning at w whole new level, which is very positive,"
he added.
Defending Olympic champion Maris Strombergs of Latvia will start as the
favourite in the elite men's race, though the popular Australian "Slammin"
Sam Willoughby has been in great form in international races in recent
weeks.
South Africa's hopes rest on the local pin-up boy of the sport, Sfiso
Nhlapo. The local hero has made a spectacular return to top form after a
spate of serious setbacks, starting with his crash in the final of the
Beijing Olympics.
The Gauteng based star broke his neck in a serious training crash last
year, but has made a miraculous return to top form. he has been competing
in the USA on a regular basis, where he has proved that he can match, and
often beat, the likes of Willoughby and Strombergs.
Just how the combined pressure of hometown expectations and the weight of
Olympic qualification will bear down on Nhlapo will be revealed before the
packed stands at the Royal Showgrounds on Saturday afternoon.
The UCI BMX World Championships takes place at the Royal Showgrounds in
Pietermaritzburg from 29 July to 1 August. More information can be found
at www.bmxworldchampspmb.co.za
ENDS
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says the UCI's technical delegate Johan
Lindstrom. |
Dave Macleod/
Gameplan Media |
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Sfiso Nhlapo will be under pressure to
perform in front of his local fans, and secure vital Olympic qualification
points in the UCI BMX World Champs in Pietermaritzburg. |
Mark Squire/
Gameplan Media |
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