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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

UI graduate Armstrong captures second gold

Dave Skretta Associated Press

HAMPTON COURT, England – Kristin Armstrong knew she was the favorite to win time trial gold in cycling at the Beijing Olympics. But when she looked at the start list in London, she counted nine riders with a shot.

In the end, there was only one.

The defending champion blistered an 18-mile course south of London on Wednesday to win her second straight gold medal.

Her time of 37 minutes, 34.82 seconds was more than 15 seconds better than world champion Judith Arndt of Germany, who took silver. Olga Zabelinskaya of Russia won the bronze.

“My mantra was, ‘You have to live with this ride,’ ” said Armstrong, the University of Idaho graduate who briefly retired after the 2008 Beijing Olympics to start a family. “You’re only as good as your last result.”

It couldn’t have been any better.

The former two-time world champion had already gained a second on the field by the first time check, and the advantage had swelled to five by the time she reached the 12 1/2-mile mark.

Armstrong knew she was headed for another gold when she started to pick off riders in the run-up to the finish, including Dutch champion Marianne Vos, who won gold in the road race.

The famously stoic Armstrong let a smile slip as she crossed the finish line, slowing to a stop and then slumping over her bike. She rested just enough to catch her breath before heading to the victory stand and her second consecutive Olympic gold.

“When she stopped, she was on top. You don’t lose what you’ve got,” said Armstrong’s teammate Amber Neben, who finished seventh. “You don’t lose the fact that you’re a great bike racer.”

Tour de France champion Bradley Wiggins of England gave the thousands of fans packing the course reason to cheer when he triumphed in the men’s race.

Wiggins captured his fourth Olympic gold medal by beating world champion Tony Martin of Germany by 42 seconds, while British teammate Chris Froome took the bronze.

It was all gold for Armstrong, even if the path from Beijing wasn’t entirely smooth.

Armstrong thought she was finished after winning the world championship in 2009, but got the itch to ride again after delivering a son, Lucas, in 2010. She got back on the bike and started to win races, only to break her collarbone during a crash in May.

Armstrong admits that she rushed her recovery, getting back on the bike only a couple weeks later. But she also thinks the time off allowed her to refocus on the London Olympics.

“This is an amazing moment,” she said. “A lot of people ask me what the differences were between this and Beijing. I would say this was a much more difficult journey.”

The mostly flat course that Armstrong turned into her personal playground began at Hampton Court Palace, the 16th century court once favored by Henry VIII.

The race meandered through the Surrey countryside, twice crossing the River Thames, before finishing back at the palace. Riders in position to medal were ushered onto so-called hot seats – three gilded thrones – to wait out the rest of the riders.

That’s where Zabelinskaya spent much of the afternoon.

The bronze medalist in the road race, she was the 10th of 24 riders to leave the start tent, and posted a time more than two minutes better than the next-fastest had crossed the line.

She looked almost sheepish sitting on her throne as riders finished.

“I’m really happy to win this medal in such company,” she said later, “but I’m also a bit disappointed, because I know I could have gone a bit faster at the beginning.”

Arndt was considered the biggest challenge to Armstrong after her time trial victory at the world championships. She was the silver medalist at the 2004 Athens Games.