
As is his way, he did not look for excuses. âSometimes, itâs pure bad luck,â he said. âToday, I have to take it on the chin as it was my fault.â Thomas did make the point that he had not been able to ride the route on closed roads, as would normally be the case at bigger races.
âI did the recon in traffic, so itâs pretty pointless really, other than knowing where the uphills and downhills are,â he said, adding that might have been to blame for some of the other crashes. Englandâs Dan Bigham was another notable one. But as he admitted, it was the same for everyone.
âItâs my fault. I was thinking âitâs a sweeping leftâ but suddenly there are barriers in the way and their legs are sticking out, and itâs âOh s—!ââ
Asked whether it cost him the gold, Thomas all but agreed. âObviously, itâs not just the actual time on the floor, not moving,â he said. âMy brake was bent at a right angle and the gear thing was off. But it was more mentally.
âBut Iâve had good practice of trying to refocus in time trials with something going wrong. Itâs frustrating but at the end of the day, you know, with that happening, it is good to come away with a medal.â
Thomasâs presence certainly added stardust to an event that also featured a 46-year-old immigration officer from Walsall, racing for the Falkland Islands, and a 48-year-old doorkeeper at the House of Commons, who was racing for Ghana. Both finished around 16 minutes behind Thomas, who was much sought-after for autographs, even from fellow riders. âItâs kind of strange when you have people come into the pen asking for photos that youâre racing against,â Thomas said. âBut itâs great.â
The Welshmanâs crash was also a bonus for Wright. The 23-year-old south Londoner produced what he called as âthe best time trial of my careerâ and was thrilled with his silver. Coming straight from a brilliant Tour de France, where he infiltrated the breakaway on multiple occasions and finished second on one stage, the ride bodes well for Wrightâs chances in Sundayâs road race, where most nations will be keen to avoid a sprint finish, given the presence of the Isle of Manâs Mark Cavendish. âItâs not going to be your conventional pro bike race, where thereâs control,â Wright promised. âItâll be attack after attack.â






