Paralympic Games: First defeat as Aileen McGlynn claims silver

Aileen McGlynn relinquished her Paralympic tandem one-kilometre time-trial title and had to settle for silver alongside pilot Helen Scott at the London 2012 velodrome.

On a day in which Britain claimed one gold, three silvers and a bronze on the track, McGlynn, who is partially sighted, and Scott clocked one minute 9.469 seconds to finish 0.550secs behind Australia’s Felicity Johnson and Stephanie Morton, who stole victory in a Paralympic record of 1min 8.919secs.

It was the first time McGlynn has tasted Paralympic defeat in the event after the 39-year-old from Glasgow won gold in Athens and Beijing with Ellen Hunter as pilot.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

But McGlynn and Scott, 22, from Halesowen, are determined to chase glory in Brazil in four years’ time after finishing second to the Australian pair at the last two World Championships and now in London.

“This was our main focus,” said a disappointed McGlynn. “We came into it really well prepared and we thought we had it. It’s bike racing, it doesn’t always go the way you wanted to.”

Scott was a team-mate of Olympic rider Jess Varnish before turning her attentions to tandem racing in April 2010 and although she has the potential to switch to the Olympic disciplines, her goal remains Paralympic glory. She said: “I still want a gold medal with Aileen. That’s our mission and we’re not going to stop until we get it.”

New Zealand’s Phillipa Gray and Laura Thompson claimed bronze in 1:11.245, with Lora Turnham and Fiona Duncan fourth in 1:11.479.

Mark Colbourne experienced ecstasy and Jody Cundy despair as a dramatic second day unfolded at the velodrome.

Colbourne claimed Paralympic gold for the first time with victory in the men’s C1 three-kilometre individual pursuit in a world record time.

Cundy, though, experienced only anger and tears while launching expletives at officials after he was denied a restart in the C4/C5 one-kilometre time-trial, an event in which he had not been beaten in six years. Cundy believed the start gate had failed to open sufficiently for his ride, but officials deemed rider error was to blame and the 33-year-old was denied a restart.

There was a happier conclusion to the day for Colbourne, who set a second world record in the space of a few hours in winning gold in three minutes 53.881 seconds. China’s Li Zhang Yu was second.

Hide Ad