ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Sunday, August 4, 1996                 TAG: 9608050145
SECTION: SPORTS                   PAGE: C-4  EDITION: NEW RIVER VALLEY 
DATELINE: ATLANTA
SOURCE: Los Angeles Times


TIME IS RIGHT FOR CYCLIST INDURAIN SPANIARD DOMINATES TIME TRIAL

With a resting heart rate of 28 beats a second, Spain's Miguel Indurain was not easily flummoxed when it was suggested that his game might have skipped a few beats since his winning streak in the Tour de France was ended at five last month by Denmark's Bjarne Riis.

Just in case the world wanted to know, Indurain proved Saturday he remains this orb's preeminent cyclist, claiming Olympic gold in the men's individual time trial with a time of 1 hour 4 minutes 5 seconds.

His time for the four laps over an 8.1-mile course, 32.44 miles, was 12 seconds faster than runner-up Abraham Olano, also of Spain, who took the silver at 1:04:17. England's Chris Boardman won the bronze at 1:04:36.

Lance Armstrong and Steve Hegg of the United States finished sixth and 16th, respectively. Riis, fresh off his Tour de France victory - or maybe not so fresh - finished 14th.

The women's time trial, two laps over the same course, was won by Russia's Zulfiya Zabirova in 36:40. Jeannie Longo-Ciprelli of France won the silver in 37 minutes and Canada's Clara Hughes was third in 37:13.

Indurain, who doesn't need advantages, got one on the street course in the upscale Atlanta suburb of Buckhead. In the time trial, riders race strictly against the clock, leaving in four groups of 10 at 90-second intervals.

Riders in the early morning groups, which included Americans Hegg, in the second group, and Armstrong, in the third, were slowed by periodic downpours.

But Indurain's group went out last on a dry track. As if it would have mattered.

``Probably not,'' said Armstrong, who finished 2:23 slower than the winner. For Indurain, the Olympic victory was satisfying, but doesnot compare to winning the Tour de France, cycling's Super Bowl.

This is the first time professional cyclists have been allowed to compete in the Olympics, although Indurain had raced, poorly, as an amateur in the 1984 Los Angeles Games.

Asked if he would trade his gold medal for a Tour de France victory, Indurain did not hesitate to say yes.

But it was important to Indurain watchers - mainly European journalists with clipboards and stopwatches - to reestablish himself after finishing a disappointing 26th in the Olympic road race.

``I don't have anything to prove to anybody,'' Indurain said. ``The Tour was a low point in my career, but now I appear to have recovered.''

Indurain, 32, is believed to be near the end of his competitive career, which is good news for the competition.

``Indurain makes you sick, because he's actually really a nice bloke,'' said Boardman, the bronze medalist.

There was plenty of anger to go around at U.S. Cycling, however, jilted this week when medal hopeful Rebecca Twigg quit in a dispute with U.S. Coach Chris Carmichael.

Twigg, a two-time Olympic medalist, was eliminated from the quarterfinals of last week's pursuit race and was upset that her personal coach, Eddie Borysewicz, was not allowed to be with her in the oval.

Twigg could face possible code-of-conduct sanctions.

The international cycling federation allowed the U.S. team to replace Twigg in the time trials with iron woman Jeanne Golay, who had competed in two previous Olympic races, without earning a medal.

After finishing 16th on weary legs, Golay lashed out at Twigg.

``It's inconceivable to me that someone could throw that away, a chance to ride in the Olympics,'' Golay said. ``I would have thought the best revenge would have been to win the gold medal in the time trials and shut everyone up.''

Golay called Twigg's criticism of Carmichael and the U.S. program ``completely inaccurate,'' and added that she though Carmichael had been ``wrongly slammed.''

Teammate Linda Brenneman, who finished 11th Saturday, said she respected Twigg in the past but was ``disappointed she couldn't get through that, get over that and perform like the champion she was in the past.''

This wasn't the type of Olympic spirit U.S. Cycling had envisioned when it entered the Atlanta Games with expectations of winning as many as six medals. Instead, the U.S. finished with three - two silvers and a bronze - in 14 events.

Carmichael called the performance encouraging, and said it might have been improved had Twigg raced Saturday.

``Guess we'll never know,'' Carmichael said.


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