
http://www.reuters.com/london-olymp...8/02/i-crashed-purpose-says-victorious-briton
I crashed on purpose, says victorious Briton
German-born Philip Hindes said he deliberately crashed after making a poor start in the heats of the Olympic track cycling team sprint, an event in which he and fellow Britons Chris Hoy and Jason Kenny went on to win gold.
"We were saying if we have a bad start we need to crash to get a restart," Hindes was quoted as saying by British newspapers on Thursday.
"I just crashed. I did it on purpose to get a restart... it was all planned really."
British Cycling said his comments were "lost in translation", adding the rider only started to learn English in October 2010, while the International Cycling Union (UCI) confirmed the result was not in question.
However, the incident follows closely on the heels of the women's badminton doubles scandal that erupted earlier this week.
Eight players -- four from South Korea and two from China and Indonesia -- were expelled from the Olympics for throwing matches in a bid to secure more favourable draws in the knockout stages later in the tournament.
On Thursday, Britain retained the men's track cycling team sprint title, beating France in the final to give Hoy his fifth Games gold medal.
But the champions had started the day embarrassingly in the qualifying session.
First man Hindes seemed to have trouble with his front wheel and crashed after a quarter of a lap in the match against Germany.
After Britain were allowed to restart, in accordance with UCI rules, Hindes made a cannonball opening to perfectly launch Kenny with Hoy finishing off in style.
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/201...id-team-gb-philip-hindes-crash_n_1736088.html
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/ol...eam-GB-their-track-cycling-gold-says-IOC.html
He said: "We were saying if we have a bad start we need to crash to get a restart. I just crashed, I did it on purpose to get a restart, just to have the fastest ride. I did it. So it was all planned, really."
France coach Florian Rousseau said cycling's international governing body must now re-examine its regulations to prevent future controversy blighting the sport.
Rousseau accepted the final outcome but said Hindes' ploy was a poor example of Olympic spirit.
He said: "There was no cheating. The British team was much stronger than the French team and I congratulate them on their success. However, I do think the rules need to be more precise so we don't find ourselves in an identical situation at another Olympic Games."The fact that he [Hindes] did it on purpose is not very good for the image of cycling. We must reflect on how we can adapt the rules so that does not happen again in future."
Rousseau said he would be speaking to the UCI to discuss the matter and suggested there was a "strong chance" the regulations could be modified in the wake of last night's furore.
He didn't "fake an injury". He crashed on purpose. There is a difference.
Tactical cycling crash compared to doping
Australian Olympic track bronze medallist Kaarle McCulloch says deliberately crashing out of a cycling event to secure a re-start is on par with doping.
The 24-year old who won bronze in the women's team sprint on Thursday with teammate Anna Meares says the action of British cyclist Philip Hindes - who admitted deliberately crashing for tactical reasons during qualifying for the men's team sprint - was unethical.
"Of course it is," she said during an Australian team media conference on Friday.
"You don't want to see anybody gain an advantage over doing something like that. It's like doping. You assume everybody that you go up against is fair and they wouldn't go to those extremes."
Despite German-born Hindes' admission trackside post race that "I did it on purpose to get a restart", British cycling say the cyclist was misunderstood - because English is his second language.
With teammates Chris Hoy and Jason Kenny, the 19-year old went on to secure gold in the event ahead of France.
"I can't imagine that Phillip would have done that on purpose," McCulloch said of the crash which she witnessed at the Olympic velodrome.
...
Afterwards he told reporters: "We were saying if we had a bad start we need to crash to get a restart. I just crashed, I did it on purpose to get a restart, just to have the fastest ride. I did it. So it was all planned, really."
The International Cycling Union (ICU) confirmed the result was legitimate, and French coach Florian Rousseau accepted the result but said Hindes' ploy was a poor example of Olympic spirit.
"There was no cheating. The British team was much stronger than the French team and I congratulate them on their success," he said.
"However, I do think the rules need to be more precise so we don't find ourselves in an identical situation at another Olympic Games. The fact that he (Hindes) did it on purpose is not very good for the image of cycling. We must reflect on how we can adapt the rules so that does not happen again in future."
Basically, the guy gave a very detailed and specific statement saying that he crashed on purpose, and now they're trying to downplay the statement by saying his english is bad (his English is NOT bad, view an interview with him backtracking here), and he himself has taken back his comments and said he did it on accident.
This embarrassing incident for the host country of this year's Olympics highlights three things:
1) The double standard towards countries like China in similar incidents of unsportsmanlike conduct. Comments from the HuffPo article:
It's already decided that the team will keep it's gold medals. It pays to be chinese. First they changed the rules to exclude the chinese from dominating in badminton and table tennis, then they dq'd the chinese female cycling team, then the badminton team, accused their swimmer of doping, and now an admitted cheat will keep his gold because he's not chinese. Spirit of the game. Sure.
Don't like throwing water on a GB medal win, BUT...we DID disqualify several teams for not playing "to the best of their ability" and broaching the "spirit of the Olympics" by not trying hard enough ..and I'm not sure there were ANY written rules against what the Teams who were disqualified did except those that were implicit..like maybe here as well? Just saying...
2) The British Olympic team trying to cover this up. Instead of admitting that he did crash his bike on purpose (within the rules), they've tried to downplay it by blaming it on his language skills and he himself completely contradicting his earlier statement. His english is not even bad. Shady.
3) People's willingness to rationalize unsportsmanlike behavior for their team. What happened here was completely un-American. If this guy were American we'd be the first to apologize for and be angry about his behavior representing his country. It's also why Americans look down on flopping/diving in things like international soccer matches. Not all English people have defended what happened here, but it's interesting what happens when the shoe is on the other foot
-----
Update:
Video of the crash
Video of Hindes giving an interview backtracking about his previous comment <-- Notice that his english is nowhere as bad as the British team were implying.