Cycling-Roberts the favourite as BMX freestyle makes debut
Send a link to a friend
[July 01, 2021]
By Martyn Herman
LONDON (Reuters) - Do not expect
three-time world champion Hannah Roberts to play it safe in her
pursuit of a gold medal when BMX freestyle makes its Olympic debut
this summer.
The American trailblazer, 19, has been pushing the envelope since
she first climbed on a BMX as an eight-year-old.
She was the first woman to land a 360 tailwhip -- a complex airborne
stunt in which only the rider's hands stay in contact with the bike
as it rotates beneath them.
After winning her third world title recently in Montpellier to
confirm her favourite tag for Tokyo, she says she is cooking up
something new for her tilt at Olympic gold.
"I have a few big flip whips and a front flip I want to do at the
Olympics if I can figure out where to do them," Roberts said in a
recent interview with Forbes.
Michigan-based Roberts will be the overwhelming favourite to take
the title in an event that has been added to the cycling programme
to join BMX racing, which debuted in Beijing in 2008.
BMX racing, in which Colombia's Mariana Pajon wil be seeking a third
successive Olympic gold, is an adrenaline-fuelled blast down a ramp
and then around a course full of jumps, with the winner the first
rider to cross the line.
Freestyle is limited only by a rider's imagination, with competitors
given 60 seconds to create gravity-defying flips and spins over a
range of obstacles including spines, walls and ramps.
Marks are awarded on criteria such as difficulty, originality,
execution, height and creativity.
"You're going to need that 'wow' factor," Britain's Charlotte
Worthington, who took the bronze medal in Montpellier, said of what
it will take to make the podium in Tokyo.
[to top of second column] |
XVIII Pan American Games - Lima 2019 -
Cycling BMX - Women Freestyle BMX Final - Costa Verde Beach Circuit,
Lima, Peru - August 11, 2019. Hannah Roberts of the U.S. in action.
REUTERS/Pilar Olivares/File Photo
Nine male and nine female riders will
compete at the Ariake Urban Sports Park, which is also hosting the
skateboarding events.
"It's definitely a risk-reward game but someone is going to pull off
a big trick," addded Worthington, who only took up BMX riding as a
20-year-old having learned the tricks on a scooter.
While Roberts will be looking for her first Olympic gold, Colombia's
BMX queen Pajon is out to maintain her domination, having raced to
gold in London and Rio.
Like Roberts, the fearless Pajon has paved the way for female riders
to compete in a domain once regarded as strictly for the boys.
"Initially, they shut the door on me and told my parents that girls
shouldn't do this," Pajon told the Olympic Channel.
American Connor Fields will also be trying to defend his BMX racing
title in Tokyo, while in the men's freestyle competition two-time X
Games champion Logan Martin will be one to watch after taking gold
in the world championships.
Martin left no stone unturned in his bid for an Olympic medal,
building his own BMX park in his backyard.
(Reporting by Martyn Herman;Editing by Peter Rutherford)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|