Daunting task ahead as Carlin inherits the hot seat
British track cycling sprinter Jack Carlin has big boots to fill as he begins the countdown to the Paris Olympics where he will face one of the toughest tasks in the sport.
The 26-year-old Scot will likely spearhead the Team GB sprint squad as the senior rider now that Jason Kenny, who won a British record seven Olympic gold medals, has retired from racing.
Following Kenny, who Carlin raced alongside at the Tokyo Games in 2021, and Kenny's predecessor Chris Hoy, is daunting enough.
But Carlin must also try to dethrone Dutch powerhouse Harrie Lavreysen, the reigning Olympic champion, who has made himself almost unbeatable around a velodrome.
Carlin was duly beaten by fellow 26-year-old Lavreysen in the semifinals of the world championships in Glasgow last year, as the flying Dutchman went on to win a fifth individual sprint world title in six years.
He will have another opportunity to go head-to-head with his nemesis at the European Track Championships which begin in Apeldoorn, the Netherlands, on Wednesday, where Lavreysen will be seeking to add to his haul of 24 major gold medals.
Carlin, who won a team sprint silver and an individual bronze in Tokyo, has never been on the top step of the podium.
"I think he's the best track cycling sprinter that ever lived really," Carlin told reporters when asked about Lavreysen's domination. "No one's touching him in terms of times. The results he gets day in, day out, are absolutely incredible. All I can do is to focus on myself.
"You look at the worlds, I raced Harrie in the semis and I gave him a good run for his money and I wasn't in tip-top shape or in Olympic form.
"I'm hoping to find the next step up and then, if I'm on the same level physically, it becomes a lot closer."
Carlin says he occasionally wakes up with a sense of "impostor syndrome", but he will have one weapon in his favor in Paris, with Kenny now British Cycling's sprint coach.
Kenny will leave no stone unturned trying to find a chink in Lavreysen's armor, as he did himself when surprising the Dutchman with an audacious keirin gold in Tokyo.
"Jason was my coach at the worlds in Glasgow and he had his eagle eye on every race, looking at all the tactics and at how people were racing and he was giving me advice," Carlin said. "Not telling me what to do, but telling me what others were doing, and I think I really respond well to that.
"I don't like people telling me exactly how to race because you have to use your instincts. Jason and I worked really well, so I'm excited to see what we can do this year."
Great Britain has been the dominant track nation for more than a decade and, invariably, has come good when it really matters. Carlin concedes the European championships are more about blowing off cobwebs.
"I think if you ask most athletes, they'll have one big day circled in red, that's the start of the Olympics," he said.
AGENCIES VIA XINHUA
Most Popular
- China loses to Japan in World Cup qualifier
- 'Playing too well': Sinner completely dominated ATP Finals
- Bayern boosts focus on youth in China
- Lillard makes winning basket in his return from concussion protocol
- Nadal focused on Davis Cup, not retirement
- 13th Round Hainan Regatta concludes