Sunday Territorian

Meares tipped to park the bike and call it quits on career

- REECE HOMFRAY

CHAMPION Australian cyclist Anna Meares is expected to retire from the sport immediatel­y and resist the lure of a Commonweal­th Games swan song in her home state of Queensland in 2018.

The greatest female track cyclist in history has remained coy on her future since a tearful farewell to the crowd at the Rio Olympics in August, but an announceme­nt drawing the curtain on her glittering career is believed to be imminent.

Meares, 33, would bow out of the sport with a staggering six Olympic medals (two gold, one silver and three bronze), 11 world championsh­ip gold medals, five Commonweal­th gold medals and 35 national titles.

An announceme­nt is expected as early as today.

As the Gold Coast Com- monwealth Games organisers prepare to open the Anna Meares Velodrome at Chandler, south of Brisbane next month, Australian cycling insiders do not expect her to continue racing on the track named in her honour.

The situation facing Meares post-Rio is almost identical to the one which faced British track cycling legend Sir Chris Hoy after London in 2012. Not even the lure of racing on the “Sir Chris Hoy Velodrome” in Glasgow at the 2014 Commonweal­th Games could convince him to shelve retirement plans and he bowed out at the top of his game.

Meares was hampered by a back injury in the lead up to Rio which was her fourth and Olympics after getting the absolute best from her body — particular­ly after breaking her neck in a race crash in 2008.

In Rio, Meares still man- aged to win Australian cycling’s only individual medal of the Games with bronze in the women’s keirin final.

If Meares does retire, she goes out as a hugely respected and valued member of the Australian team having led the Aussies and carried the flag at the opening ceremony of the 2014 Commonweal­th Games and this year’s Rio Olympics.

Meares was unavailabl­e for comment yesterday.

 ??  ?? Cycling sensation Anna Meares
Cycling sensation Anna Meares

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