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Team GB track stars use Saturday's Revolution as stepping stone to Worlds

Pendleton insists focus remains on Sprint for now ahead of Copenhagen

Olympic champions Sir Chris Hoy and Victoria Pendleton head a star-studded line-up for the final round of the Revolution Series at the Manchester Velodrome on Saturday where they will do battle with some of the same rivals they will meet four weeks later at the World Championships in Copenhagen.

This evening session is sold out, but tickets are still available for the afternoon event, built around the National Madison Championships, and which also features Hoy and Pendleton in action during their respective sprint qualification rounds.

Other Team GB riders looking to use the event as preparation for the World Championships include Jason Kenny and Ross Edgar, and the British cyclists will face top-level competitors from countries including Italy, The Netherlands and Switzerland plus a full German team which includes Stefan Nimke, World Champion at the Kilo.

According to Pendleton, “the Revolution is a really good opportunity to get some race experience approaching the Worlds. I haven't done that many World Cups this year and there's going to be a few good riders there who I'll be up against at the Worlds so it's a good idea to see where I'm at, and where they're at too!"

"My preparation for the Worlds is going quite well at the moment” she added. “I've had a few troubles with injury but hopefully I think they're under control which is definitely pleasing. I'm looking forward to going into Copenhagen and hope to regain my jersey for another year."

Pendleton, current World and Olympic champion in the Sprint, also said that for now she will continue to concentrate on that event, although recent changes to the Olympic programme mean that she will also have the opportunity of going for gold in the Team Sprint and the Keirin at London 2012.

"Currently, the sprint is still my main focus,” she explained. “We're just re-strengthening the sprint squad at the moment, the riders coming through are fairly young still and they're only just starting to train full time. Jess Varnish and Becky James are looking very promising for the future, but this year it's about sticking to the original plan and what I was focusing on, which fundamentally is still the sprint event,” she continued.

“I am looking forward to competing in the team sprint, but it's still early days,” added Pendleton. “We're still in the process of forming a team, and how we're going to approach it. It's still quite experimental for us in that phase, but the team sprint will be a very dominant part of my programme from next year onwards."

Reflecting the new Olympic programe, Revolution will feature Individual and Team Sprints as well as the Jeirin, and also sees Pendleton up against Dutch rider Will Kanis, whom she beat to take the World Championship in Poland and who finished third in this season’s World Cup rankings.

Pendleton sees Saturday as an opportunity to put down a marker ahead of Copenhagen, saying: "It's always good to prove to your rivals, how well you're going, if you're going well! Sprinting is very psychological and therefore having as many opportunities to be dominant or perform well is always good. However, we're still a training block away from the World Championships so I'm hoping that I've got a lot of improving to do before I get there," she concluded.

The afternoon session takes place from Noon to 3.30pm, with doors opening at 11am. Tickets cost £6, or £3 for concessions and £15 for families of four, and can be ordered online from the Revolution website or by telephoning the Manchester Velodrome on 0161 223 2244.

 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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