Tom Pidcock wins Gold in Paris

  • 29 Jul 24
  • race Report

Tom Pidcock rode to a spectacular victory in the Paris Mountain Bike race to defend his title and claim his second Gold medal in the event.

After a conservative start, Tom wove his way forward, completing the first of eight laps in fourth overall. Maintaining his high pace, he was quickly into third, before a fierce acceleration on lap three saw the Yorkshireman go clear with Victor Koretzky of France.

As Tom continued to put the pressure on at the front of the pack, disaster struck. A front-wheel puncture threatened to end his race. Fortunately, it happened within metres of the pits, and Tom was quickly in, and - with bike swaps not allowed - getting a wheel change.

Pidcock would leave the pits some 35 seconds down on the now-solo Koretzky and start the chase back on. Initially, the gap remained steady, but the World Champion judged his effort to perfection, catching the Frenchman on the final lap. 

The Yorkshireman attempted to shake his opponent on the main climb of the course, but was unable to do so. Then, Koretzky countered into the descent, putting distance between the pair. A mistake on the twisting descent would see Tom catch back up, and a sprint finish looked likely.

That was until Pidcock took an alternative line through a tree-lined, root-filled section of the course. The move put him shoulder to shoulder with the Frenchman, but Tom came out on top. Koretzky lost his momentum, and the World Champion would cross the line solo, winning the Gold medal by nine seconds.

“This week, with the build-up to the Olympics, so many things go through your head. Emotions and scenarios. By the time you get on the start line you’re a bit knackered as it is.
Tom Pidcock
Results
FR Flag

Paris 2024

  • 1
    Tom Pidcock
    01:26:22
  • 2
    Victor Koretzky
    + 09
  • 3
    Alan Hatherly
    + 11
“It was all going pretty well. I knew Victor would be strong here and I knew it wouldn’t be easy today. Then the puncture happened. I knew I was just going to have to get on with it.
Tom Pidcock
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“I knew at that point I had almost five laps. That’s almost 50 minutes and anything is possible. Then suddenly I was coming back really fast to Victor but I couldn’t get rid of him. I knew how fast he is on the last lap. In the end I just had to go for a gap. In the end rubbing is racing! It’s what I’ve always done and the Olympics is no different. I’m sorry for him. The support for him was incredible – but it’s the Olympics, you’ve just got to go all-in!”
Tom Pidcock