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Anna Kiesenhofer secures gold in women's Olympic cycling road race

Anna Kiesenhofer secures gold in women's Olympic cycling road race
© Reuters
Annemiek van Vleuten thought she had won gold for the heavily-favoured Dutch when she crossed the line 75 seconds after Kiesenhofer.

Anna Kiesenhofer took a shock solo win for Austria in the women's Olympic cycling road race as the peloton got their sums wrong in chasing down the mathematician.

Kiesenhofer, without a professional contract since 2017, was on the attack from the very start of the 137-kilometre race to the Fuji International Speedway, and was rewarded with a truly stunning victory after going solo for the final 40km of the race.

A combination of no race radio and small squads – only five nations had the full complement of four riders – proved a recipe for chaos on the foothills of Mount Fuji, with Annemiek van Vleuten thinking she had won gold for the heavily-favoured Dutch when she crossed the line 75 seconds after Kiesenhofer.

The Austrian and her fellow escapees had been allowed an advantage of more than 10 minutes – a gap virtually unheard of in the shorter stages of women's racing – and their advantage still stood at five minutes when she rode away from Anna Plichta and Omer Shapiro to go it alone to the finish.

At the time it seemed too soon to go clear as Van Vleuten was attacking out of the peloton behind, but there was no miscalculation from Kiesenhofer, who had quite literally been doing her homework to set up this victory.

The 30-year-old, the reigning Austrian time trial champion, studied maths at the University of Cambridge before collecting a PhD from the University of Catalonia, but more recently has been studying the effects of heat on the body – ideal preparation for racing in the humid conditions of Japan.

With Plichta and Shapiro hoovered up by the peloton as they entered the speedway for the second and final time, many in the chasing group believed they were then fighting it out for gold.

Elisa Longo Borghini insisted she knew she had taken bronze but Van Vleuten – who suffered three cracks in her spine in a horror crash at the Rio Games in 2016 – raised her arms in celebration as she crossed the line.

"I didn't know," the 38-year-old said afterwards. "I was wrong."

Such was the confusion that Lizzie Deignan, who finished 11th for Great Britain, even congratulated Van Vleuten in the first of her post-race interviews before realising the true winner.

"I don't know anything about her," Deignan said of Kiesenhofer. "She's definitely a surprise winner."

Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games – Day Two
Van Vleuten celebrated on the line believing she had won gold (Martin Rickett/PA)

Van Vleuten was part of a Dutch squad of intimidating strength – three world champions in Van Vleuten, reigning Olympic champion Anna van der Breggen and Marianne Vos, plus the rising star Demi Vollering – but such was their power that others had left it to them to chase the breakaway in a fatal mistake.

"There was a huge lack of information," Deignan added. "Probably the Dutch dominance before the race worked against me in the end. Nobody committed. In my position as a sole rider, there was nothing I could do and I was surprised by the lack of collaboration."

Kiesenhofer's gold is Austria's first at a summer Olympics since 2004, and first in cycling since Adolf Schmal's victory in the 12 hour race at the first modern Games in 1896.

"It feels incredible," she said. "I couldn't believe it. Even when I crossed the line, it was like, 'Is it done now? Do I have to continue riding?' Incredible...

"I was just trying to get to the line. My legs were completely empty. I have never emptied myself so much in my whole life. I could hardly pedal any more. It felt like there was zero energy in my legs."

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Lizzie Deignan pictured in 2014
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