logo
Ben Wiggins targets Olympic glory of his own

Ben Wiggins targets Olympic glory of his own

BBC News4 days ago

Cyclist Ben Wiggins, son of five-time Olympic champion and Tour de France winner Sir Bradley, has opened up on the good and bad of being related to a legend of the sport.The 20-year-old from Ormskirk is currently competing at the Under-23 Giro D'Italia, also known as Giro Next Gen, and has admitted the Wiggins surname carries a hefty weight of expectation."I definitely see it partly as an advantage but, trust me, there's an awful lot of things that come with it that aren't as easy," Wiggins told BBC Radio Lancashire."There's a lot of benefits that come with it that people would expect, but then there's more things that come with it that aren't as good."I'm incredibly proud of him and what he did. Sometimes, when they do team presentations before the race, I'd be brought on stage and introduced as Bradley Wiggins' son before my name is even mentioned."I'm also compared to the standards of a five-time Olympic champion and Tour de France winner. "I'm 20 years old. Maybe when I'm 35 that's fair enough, but I'm just getting started."
Wiggins began his cycling career in 2022 when he signed as a junior rider for the Fensham Howes-MAS Design team.After winning a silver medal at the 2023 Cycling World Championships in the Men's Junior Individual Time Trial, Wiggins joined United States-based Hagens Berman Jayco, managed by Axel Merckx - the son of five-time Tour de France champion Eddy Merckx.Wiggins says his and Merckx's similar stories played a big role in deciding which team to ride for."As a junior, I was second in the World Championships in Glasgow and I had the choice of many different places to go," he explained."But for me, having that figure in the team which felt the same experience as me - but on a bigger scale - that was the biggest attraction."
A rugby and football fanatic from an early age, Wiggins says he was 15 before he wanted to become a cyclist, despite his father's influence on the sport."I played rugby and football predominantly up until when Covid hit and we couldn't play team sports. At school, there was that banter around cycling. It's not fancy, it's not cool," he said.Wiggins also has his eyes on representing his country at the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles but says he has a lot of work to do if he is to follow in his father's footsteps."My ambition is to be an Olympic Champion in LA," Wiggins added."There's plenty more things on the table for me to achieve but it's a dream of mine so that's definitely the mid to long-term goal, on the track or on the road."If you can do both you're a big asset for the team, so that's my ambition."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Test Match Special  England v India: England weather Jasprit storm as game in the balance
Test Match Special  England v India: England weather Jasprit storm as game in the balance

BBC News

time14 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Test Match Special England v India: England weather Jasprit storm as game in the balance

Jonathan Agnew is alongside former England captains Michael Vaughan & Sir Alastair Cook, and commentator Prakash Wakankar for reaction of the second day's play at Headingley between England and India. They discuss Jasprit Bumrah's brilliance with the ball and England's temperament with the bat. Ben Duckett gives his thoughts on the day after hitting 62. Plus, TMS superfan and Lord's Taverners Super 1s player Ravi is surprised with a trip to the TMS commentary box.

Jasprit Bumrah shows timid England seamers how risk brings reward
Jasprit Bumrah shows timid England seamers how risk brings reward

Times

time23 minutes ago

  • Times

Jasprit Bumrah shows timid England seamers how risk brings reward

There may not be a better cricket pitch in the world than at Headingley. It exhilarates and frustrates in equal measure; it can exasperate, but also stimulate. Above all, it is a pitch that, especially to a bowler, says: 'Don't be afraid of taking risks, as rewards may be just around the corner.' It is a place of extremes: England famously winning in the 1981 Ashes Test after being asked to follow on, or being bowled out for 67 by the Aussies in 2019 and still chasing 362 in the second innings to win by one wicket. On Saturday, India produced a fourth-wicket of partnership of 209 and then lost seven wickets for 41. It was classic Headingley fare. Don't take your eye off the ball for a second. What makes it such a good surface? The bounce, firstly. There is more lift and life from this 22 yards of loam than any other in England. Edges carry to slips set halfway back to the boundary. But long hops can be cut or pulled confidently and half-volleys slide obligingly on to the middle of the bat rather than hitting the toe end. When the ball is new and the clouds are heavy, it wriggles past the bat like an elusive snake. When the ball is old and the skies are clear, it satisfies a batter's deepest cravings. For a bowler it rewards bravery, punishes timidity. You have to speculate to accumulate. Look to pitch the ball up, but deliver it with purpose, intent. Don't just float it up there. Chris Woakes, slightly short of bowling after his ankle injury, was a bit inclined to do that. Headingley is a cruel place if you are a bit out of sync. Woakes's figures were zero for 103. Ben Stokes, galloping to the wicket with easy rhythm and forcing the ball in to the pitch almost on a driving length, asked a question every ball. His figures were four for 66. The margins are minute. Later, Josh Tongue got some cheap spoils for targeting the stumps of the lower order. Brydon Carse paid the penalty for not making the Indian openers play enough. This is the first Test at Headingley since 2007 when England have taken the field without James Anderson or Stuart Broad — or both — in the team (they have 97 wickets and average 26 at Headingley between them). It made Stokes's decision to put India in — based on the stats suggesting the pitch gets better day by day — more of a risk than it might otherwise have been. Because of the precision required, the rapid outfield and the odd undulations of the ground — running slightly downhill and then up on to the pitch from the Kirkstall Lane End, and yet ploughing uphill from the Rugby Stand End, it is a tough place for a bowler uncertain of himself. Your front foot lands slightly sooner than you expect from the Kirkstall Lane End, jarring your whole body, and you tend to overpitch, or no ball (both, in my case). You are switched to the Rugby Stand End, which feels like a steep climb, and you keep overstriding and dropping short. Neither Carse nor Tongue had ever played a first-class match at Headingley before. England were thankful that Stokes found a similar rhythm to the brilliantly sustained spell he produced here in that epic 2019 Test, and that India totally relinquished their advantage of 430 for three. Against this unproven attack they should have got 600. The India bowlers suffered the same extremes of fortune. As expected from a man with 205 Test wickets at an average of 19.4 — lower than anyone in history with 200 or more Test victims — Jasprit Bumrah was virtually unplayable in his first four overs. Unperturbed by the ground's unusual geography in his approach — because he doesn't have a run-up — he produced a series of wicked deliveries angling into the stumps and then snaking away. A high-tech bowling machine set to 88mph with a hint of late outswing to right or left-hander could not have unleashed a more searching or unremitting spell. It was to Ollie Pope's and Ben Duckett's great credit that they survived it, aided by Ravindra Jadeja's dropped catch off Duckett at backward point. With his extraordinary action and fingertip command of swing, Bumrah is a freak. He is as good in his way as the whippet-like Malcolm Marshall — generally agreed to be the best of the great West Indian attack of the 1980s — and with many of the same attributes. High pace, deception, super-skilled manipulation of the ball with his wrist and an innate understanding of batsmen, pitches and situations. Like Bumrah, his deliveries seemed laser-guided to evade bats and cannon into stumps. Marshall averaged 14 with the ball at Headingley, and, it might be recalled, even bowled England out in 1988 (taking seven for 53) with a broken thumb. But the other India bowlers found control elusive and the pitch capricious. Mohammed Siraj conceded four an over, and Prasidh Krishna went at six. Pope and Duckett were coasting along in a second-wicket partnership of 122. Until overambition cost Duckett his wicket and could have caused Pope's downfall too, but for a second drop, this time by Jaiswal. Bumrah the sufferer. As with almost any Headingley Test, only a fool would try to predict the eventual outcome after two days' play. But England could do with Jofra Archer coming through his Sussex rehab, and soon.

Ollie Pope repays England's faith with defiant century after Jasprit Bumrah scare as hosts mount strong response to India
Ollie Pope repays England's faith with defiant century after Jasprit Bumrah scare as hosts mount strong response to India

Daily Mail​

time27 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Ollie Pope repays England's faith with defiant century after Jasprit Bumrah scare as hosts mount strong response to India

Until Saturday, Ollie Pope's relationship with Jasprit Bumrah was best summed up by the sight of two flattened stumps as he scrambled to keep his footing. The relevance of that image from last year's series on the subcontinent faded with every run off Pope's bat at Headingley, however, as he survived Bumrah's 88-mile-per-hour missiles - including one that flew off the edge through the vacant third slip region to bring up a 64-ball 50 - to bring up a ninth Test hundred shortly before the close. Until this absorbing battle, Pope had averaged just 24.6 against India despite hitting 196 in a single innings, but here he took the chance to justify his retention at No 3 ahead of rising star Jacob Bethell, placing England on much firmer ground than they could have imagined when play resumed on the second morning. In the build-up, Ben Stokes claimed dropping his vice-captain would be 'ridiculous' given his recent record, and overcoming Bumrah's barrage - after walking to the crease following Zak Crawley's first-over dismissal - provided further credence to the claim. There was one moment of good fortune when, on 60, Yashasvi Jaiswal shelled a chance at third slip off Bumrah soon after Ben Duckett became the India fast bowler's second victim of the innings. But he deserved some luck after dealing with an initial new-ball examination in very different conditions to those a raucous Headingley witnessed 24 hours earlier. The Leeds weather, frazzling on Friday, became an ally to England on day two as the sun was overtaken by gloom and although England took more than an hour to separate overnight centurions Shubman Gill and Rishabh Pant, once they did, India fell in a heap, losing their final seven wickets for 41 runs. England therefore went into a reply delayed three quarters of an hour by early afternoon drizzle with victory hopes remaining intact. Yes, they had conceded 471 after opting to bowl first, but that is small beer compared to what has been overcome during the Bazball era. Three times wins have been achieved after opponents have posted 550-plus and India stacked up 436 prior to Pope's heroics in Hyderabad last January. As he walked off unbeaten on 100 in a score of 209 for three he did so in the knowledge that modern Headingley surfaces get better not worse and that despite a listless beginning pre-lunch and the loss of Joe Root late on, England have moved themselves into a position from which to develop another escape to victory. He will have Harry Brook for company when play resumes thanks to a dramatic reprieve for the hometown hero in the final over of the evening: Bumrah denied a fourth wicket, via a top-edged pull, courtesy of over-stepping. Negotiating Bumrah's burst following a night's rest feels vital. In India's polarised attack, it is a different game every time he gets the ball in his hands. England's bowling also featured a stand-out operator and there was a strong argument for Stokes taking the ball himself on the second morning, instead of throwing it to his senior man Chris Woakes as India resumed on 359 for three. The big question hanging over Woakes' head on his comeback from an ankle injury has been whether he can make next winter's Ashes, but an anaemic first outing with the ball here might lead to a change in the narrative. More performances like this - conceding three figures in going wicketless - will jeopardise the chances of a bowler suddenly looking all of his 36 years surviving this series. A long half-volley in Woakes' second over from the Kirkstall Lane End was eased to the long-off boundary, taking Shubman Gill beyond his previous career-best score of 128 on the occasion of his Indian Test captaincy debut. The overall lack of threat in the opening hour revealed itself in Stokes removing a traditional slip cordon and re-deploying fielders at leg slip, gully and at various strategic points on the drive. But India's fourth-wicket pair skilfully threaded deliveries into other gaps during the latter stages of their 209-run alliance, most audaciously when Pant met the introduction of Shoaib Bashir with a kayak roll of a shot, flipping the ball over his shoulder as he hit the deck. Later in the over, the third of Pant's six sixes - thrashed via short-arm jab into the western terrace - brought up India's 400. His fourth - a one-handed swipe over midwicket - took him to a 146-ball hundred, his seventh in Tests, and triggered a showman's celebration: dropping his helmet and bat, he executed a perfect somersault. Of course, he did. He was toying with England's attack at this stage, and even miscues were finding their way over boundary catchers - a sprawling Brydon Carse left groping at thin air at long-off later in the over. But a piece of over-exuberance from Gill, needlessly picking out deep square leg off Bashir, ceded India's momentum and with cloud cover rolling in, England pounced. Karun Nair and Shardul Thakur were both suckered into drives off Stokes either side of Tongue pinning Pant leg before with a delivery that veered past the inside edge, a dismissal that meant Jamie Smith's missed stumping cost only 10 runs. Thakur's dismissal signalled lunch with India on 454 for seven, but their collapse gathered pace upon the resumption as Tongue in particular extracted lavish swing and seam movement under the floodlights. Then, it was over to his Nottinghamshire colleague Ben Duckett, who struck 62 in a second-wicket stand of 122, and man-of-the-moment Pope to build on what was an extraordinary turnaround.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store