USA Cycling announced today 21 of its 24 nominees to the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team, including all 16 men’s athletes across the disciplines of road cycling, track cycling, mountain biking and bicycle motocross (BMX). Additionally, USA Cycling formally announced five automatic women’s nominees across the four Olympic disciplines of cycling.
Of the 21 athletes named on Tuesday, 12 earned automatic
nominations under USA Cycling’s Olympic selection procedures, while nine
additional athletes were nominated to the Olympic Team by a nine-person
selection committee according to USA Cycling’s Principles of Discretion.
ROAD CYCLING
In the discipline of road cycling, a total of
five men were nominated to the Olympic Team, while one automatic nomination to
the women’s squad was announced.
On the men’s side, only one athlete earned an automatic
nomination, while USA Cycling made four discretionary picks.
Levi
Leipheimer (Santa Rosa, Calif.) was the only automatic qualifier as
a result of a top-three finish in a UCI Grand Tour between July 1, 2007 and
July 1, 2008. Leipheimer placed third overall at the 2007 Tour de France
when he finished just 31 seconds off the pace of teammate Alberto Contador of
Spain and eight seconds back from runner-up Cadel Evans of Australia. An
Olympian in 2004, Leipheimer will represent the United States in his second
Olympic Games.
Discretionary selections to the men’s road squad include George Hincapie
(Greenville, S.C.), Jason
McCartney (Coralville, Iowa), Christian
Vande Velde (Boulder, Colo.) and David Zabriskie (Salt Lake
City, Utah). All discretionary nominations were made by USA Cycling based on an
athlete’s capability to medal or otherwise enhance team performance and create
a medal capable environment.
Nominated to his fifth Olympic Team, Hincapie becomes the
only five-time Olympic cyclist in U.S. history. McCartney and Vande Velde
will each compete in their second Olympic Games. McCartney was a member of the
2004 squad on the road, while Vande Velde was a member of the track squad in
2000. Zabriskie will be making his first Olympic appearance.
Hincapie, Leipheimer, McCartney, Vande Velde and Zabriskie
will all compete in the mass start road race.
Since no men’s road athletes met the automatic criteria to
compete in the individual time trial, Leipheimer and Zabriskie received
discretionary nominations to fill the United States’ two start positions in the
race against the clock. Two of the United States’ most decorated time trialists
in recent history, Leipheimer and Zabriskie have consistently medaled in
world-class races over the course of the last several years. Most notably,
Leipheimer won stage 19 of the 2007 Tour de France and stage 5 of the 2008 Tour
of California. He also finished on the podium in two other UCI ProTour events –
the prologue of the 2007 Dauphine Libere and stage 8 of the 2007 Tour of
Germany. A silver medalist in the time trial at the 2006 UCI Road World
Championships, Zabriskie also won two Grand Tour time trials – stage 1 of the
2005 Tour de France and stage 8 of the 2005 Giro d’ Italia. He has also
appeared on the podium in three additional Grand Tour time trials since 2005
and has captured two consecutive USA Cycling Professional Time Trial titles
(2006-07). Most recently, Zabriskie finished third in stage 3 of the 2007
Dauphine Libere and second in stage 5 of the 2008 Tirreno-Adriatico.
Kristin
Armstrong (Boise, Idaho), by virtue of her silver medal in the time
trial at the 2007 world championships last September, earned the sole automatic
nomination to the women’s road team. The 2008 Games will be Armstrong’s second
Olympic appearance after competing in the road race in Athens. Armstrong is automatically
qualified to contest both the road race and time trial in Beijing.
TRACK CYCLING
In the discipline of track cycling, a total of
six men and two women were nominated to the Olympic Team.
Receiving automatic nominations were Michael
Blatchford (Cypress, Calif.), Bobby Lea (Mertztown, Pa.)
and Taylor
Phinney (Boulder, Colo.) to the men’s squad and Sarah Hammer (Temecula,
Calif.) and Jennie Reed
(Kirkland, Wash.) to the women’s team.
Blatchford qualified for the team sprint event in Beijing at
USA Cycling’s Team Selection Camp in mid-June when he recorded an automatic
time standard of 17.973 seconds in the 250-meter time trial. Blatchford
also received a discretionary nomination to compete in the match sprint based
on his recent head-to-head performances against other members of USA Cycling’s
Track Talent Pool. In addition to posting the fastest time in the selection
camp, Blatchford also turned in the fastest time and was the only American
sprinter to advance from the qualifying round in the match sprint at the 2008
UCI Track World Championships last March.
Lea qualified in similar fashion as the fastest endurance
rider to meet a pair of time standards in a 3,000-meter mass start test at USA
Cycling’s selection camp last month. Lea’s marks of 29.525 seconds at the
500-meter mark and 3:17.648 at the finish translated into an automatic
nomination to contest both the points race and Madison in Beijing.
Phinney punched his ticket to Beijing back in January when
he eclipsed a time standard at the third round of the 2007-08 UCI Track World
Cup Classics series at the ADT Event Center in Los Angeles. His mark of
4:25.684 in the qualifying round of the 4,000-meter individual pursuit on Jan.
18 earned him an automatic nomination for that event in Beijing.
Hammer and Reed each earned automatic nominations as
medalists at the world championships. Hammer captured a silver medal in the
3000-meter individual pursuit, while Reed claimed a bronze medal in the match
sprint. Their respective performances in Manchester automatically
qualified them to contest those events in Beijing.
Adam
Duvendeck (Santa Barbara, Calif.) and Giddeon Massie (Zionhill,
Pa.) received discretionary nominations for the remaining two men’s team sprint
positions, while Michael
Friedman (Pittsburgh, Pa.) earned a discretionary nomination for the
Madison.
Teammates in the team sprint at the 2004 Athens Games,
Massie and Duvendeck placed second and third respectively in a standing
250-meter time trial at USA Cycling’s selection camp. Most recently, the
trio of Blatchford, Duvendeck and Massie teamed up to set a national record in
the team sprint at the world championships.
Friedman recently clocked the second-fastest time behind Lea
in the 3,000-meter mass start test at USA Cycling’s selection camp, posting
times of 30.359 seconds and 3:20.192 over 500 and 3,000 meters respectively.
Of the eight track athletes nominated, three will be making
their second appearance in the Olympic Games. Reed contested the match sprint
in 2004, while Massie and Duvendeck were also team sprint teammates in
Athens.
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