By TIM REYNOLDS,
(AP Photo/Christophe Ena)
BEIJING (AP) Mike Day pumped his fist
and shook it in the air, even while lamenting that he barely missed a
gold medal. Donny Robinson said he was honored merely to be part of it
all. Jill Kintner simply couldn't stop smiling.
Silver, bronze and bronze.
No gold for American BMX racers - but on the sport's most historic day, no complaints, either.
Day finished second in the men's
Olympic final Friday, one spot ahead of Robinson, while Kintner
survived a crash-filled women's main event to win her bronze. So the
country that invented the genre of cycling known as bicycle motocross
nearly four decades ago saw its athletes leave BMX's first-ever Olympic
finals with three of the six medals awarded.
"Silver medal, after 3½ years of
training, I can't complain. We had all the resources to make this
happen and we're excited to be here," Day said. "Two men and a woman on
the podium, I'm pumped."
So was USA Cycling, which now has five medals at the Beijing Games.
Americans have exceeded that total
only twice before, winning nine in 1984 when the Eastern bloc nations
boycotted, and claiming 21 in 1904, when the U.S. was the only nation
racing. And the accomplishment wasn't lost on the American racers.
"First woman for America, in the
first event ever, first medal, it's such a piece of history," said
Kintner, who rides with a shredded knee ligament that'll require
surgery soon. "I'm so glad I can represent and be a part of it. Mikey
and Donny and me, it's huge for American BMX. Think about it. This'll
bring a big boost to our program. It puts us on the map again."
World champion Maris Strombergs of
Latvia won the men's gold, sweeping to the front at the start of the
winner-take-all final and never losing control. The French duo of
Anne-Caroline Chausson and Laetitia Le Corguille took gold and silver,
respectively, in the women's title race, where Kintner rallied from far
back in the pack to win her medal.
On a warm, bright, sunny morning in
Beijing, while there were no golds to celebrate, three American flags
flew over the medal stand - the proudest moment yet for the perennially
powerful U.S. BMX program.
"We put on a great show," Robinson said, "and kind of showed everyone that the sport is really awesome."
The day was filled with crashes,
especially in Turn 1, a tight, banked, asphalt bend where mayhem broke
out with amazing regularity.
But the Americans largely stayed out of trouble - and in the women's final, Kintner benefited from the chaos.
Near the back of the eight-woman
pack after a poor start in the final, Kintner kept pumping the whole
way, hopeful for a break, which British racer Shanaze Reade provided.
Reade, who crashed three times during the Olympics, went down again in
the final turn, and Kintner maneuvered around her into third place.
"How is that! Talk about stuff
flying all over the track everywhere," Kintner said. "People were going
for broke, so I was patient, I waited, I avoided all the problems - and
there it was."
After crossing the finish line,
Kintner hopped off her bike, put her hands atop her helmet, hugged some
of her competitors, then thrust her fists into the air, all while Reade
writhed on the asphalt 50 yards away, realizing she'd just blown a
medal.
Reade claimed that Chausson cut her off, but in BMX, nearly anything goes.
"I believe she made an error," Chausson said. "All the better for the French team."
All the better for Kintner, too.
She's a former world mountaincross
champion who came back to BMX only for the pursuit of an Olympic medal,
which she wanted in tribute to her father, who died two years ago and
was essentially the driving force behind her cycling career as a kid.
Dad would've been proud Friday, without question.
His daughter had "4 Dad" written on her gloves, giving them a kiss before every ride.
"I was thinking of him," Kintner said.
Day was the dominant rider in the
men's field, winning the time trial and all three of his quarterfinal
heats Wednesday, then winning his first two semifinals on Friday.
But in BMX, the fastest rider doesn't always win - not with eight people looking for the best line.
And in the men's title race, Strombergs found it.
Throughout the competition, success
on the 35-foot, severely sloped starting ramp was critical. Without a
good start, no racer could find the best lines going into Turn 1 -
where American three-time world champion Kyle Bennett suffered a
dislocated shoulder Wednesday. That turn saw crashes in eight of the 12
semifinal heats, where racers vying for position inevitably got tangled
with one another.
"It's like playing pinball out there," said Bennett, who raced Friday with pain and didn't qualify for the final.
Knowing that, Day and Strombergs
went all-out in the final to be the first into that turn, and
Strombergs prevailed. Day and Robinson, their blue-and-white outfits
flapping in the breeze their speed was creating, stood on their pedals
and chased with all they had, but the Latvian never slipped.
"Being in the final and getting second, I'm still excited," Day said.
Added Robinson: "I don't think there's any way we can regret anything we did today."
So in the end, the U.S. had racers on either side of the podium, just not the top spot.
Disappointing? For certain.
An accomplishment? To them, it absolutely was.
Long after their news conferences
was over, long after the fans emptied out of the track and the TV
cameras went dark, Kintner, Day and Robinson posed for dozens of
pictures with their families and friends who flew halfway around the
world to watch.
Everyone smiling, everyone thrilled.
They didn't lose golds, they said. The way they saw it, they won silver and bronzes.
"You never know what's going to happen," Kintner said. "That's kind of the beauty of our sport."