Cycling Weekly

IF YOU CAN STAND THE HEAT…

Just over two weeks ago, rank outsider Anna Kiesenhofer attacked in the first few seconds of the women’s road race at the Tokyo Olympics. On paper, the 30-year-old stood almost no chance of even escaping, let alone winning, against a peloton packed with medal contenders. But Kiesenhofer produced the kind of gun-to-tape performance not even a movie script writer could have dreamed up.

The Austrian was so far ahead that the favourites seemed to have almost forgotten about her. When Annemiek van Vleuten crossed the line she thought she’d won gold. But the day belonged to Kiesenhofer, and in the aftermath of victory it became clear that she had done a lot of homework during the build-up – specifically in relation to how she would deal with the Tokyo heat. What can we learn from her example, bearing in mind that climate change is making high temperatures a more frequent feature of our riding, and the draw of foreign riding in

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