The Star Malaysia

Gamble pays off as Worthingto­n cooks up BMX gold

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TOKYO: They say if you can’t stand the heat then get out of the kitchen, but British BMX freestyler Charlotte Worthingto­n was as cool as a cucumber on a baking Tokyo morning to claim a dramatic Olympic gold medal.

With temperatur­es soaring into the high 30s the former Mexican restaurant chef gambled on executing a trick never managed before in a female BMX competitio­n.

When she crash-landed painfully trying to nail a 360° backflip – a head-spinning move that defies the laws of physics – it appeared she had bitten off more than she could chew.

Third last out of nine after her first run and with favourite Hannah Roberts out alone at the top with 96.10 points from a sizzling first run, Worthing needed the ride of her life, and more, to topple the American.

Undaunted, Worthingto­n nailed the trick second time round, having kept it a closely-guarded secret all week after managing it in training this week at the Ariake Urban Sport Park.

Flowing over the ramps with moves known as barspins and tailwhips she then pulled off a forward flip that probably sealed the deal -earning her a massive 97.50 from the judges.

“It was incredible. I’ve not been doing that trick for that long, but we’ve been trying to find that big banger trick and when we found it we were like, ‘I think this is the one’,” Worthingto­n said after snatching gold out of the fire.

It was a stupendous moment of sporting drama -- an athlete staking everything on gold or nothing.

“We set the target of the gold medal and it was either go big or go home,” Worthingto­n, who used to slave away 40 hours a week in a Manchester restaurant cooking fajitas, told reporters.

“I’ve learned in the years prior to this when competing that if you gamble and give yourself that chance then it can pay off and you’ll feel better than if you hold back.”

After such a heavy fall in her first run, Worthingto­n showed great composure to try the stunt again -one she had managed a “few times” on the more forgiving rubber surface in training.

She said her coach Jamie Bestwick, a trailblaze­r in BMX freestyle, had given her some simple advice.

“Our mantra throughout this whole thing has just been ‘breath’, she said. — Reuters

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