Amy Crouch
is the new golden girl of
British cycle speedway. The 15
year old from Leicester produced
a glittering performance at
Poole this afternoon (25/08/08)
to win the women's national
championship in convincing
style. Popular Amy raced to a
brilliant 20 point maximum which
not only secured her the women's
title but also the under-16
crown as well.
It was a
dream come true for Amy. "I am
so excited, I can't tell you"
she told spokesman-online
minutes after her victory.
"When I beat Jessica (Lamb) and
Lucy (Whitehead) from the
outside grid in race 16, I knew
the title was there for the
taking. I must confess I hoped
to win the under-16s but to win
the women's title as well is
unbelievable. It's amazing" she
said modestly.
The
meeting got off to a sensational
start when one of the
pre-tournament favourites, Lucy
Whitehead. was relegated to
third in her opening ride. The
2006 champion was caught off
guard as Ipswich's Lauren Jacobs
swept inside her on the back
straight, bringing through Laura
Dale in the process. A third
from her opening race was not
the start Lucy or the crowd was
expecting.
A second
win in heat eight gave
determined Jacobs a deserved
share of the lead alongside Jess
Lamb and Amy Crouch on eight
points. Already there was
daylight between them and the
rest of the field, Michelle
Whitehead, Rachel Edge, Laura
Dale and Lucy Whitehead already
slipping back on six points
apiece.
Defending champion Lamb scored a
crucial win over Jacobs in heat
nine, outgunning Lauren from the
tapes and powering her way round
the first turn to victory.
Meanwhile Crouch would not be
shaken off and easily accounted
for one of her closest rivals
Rachel Edge in heat 11.
Heat 14
decided the title. With Lucy
Whitehead (grid two) and Jess
Lamb (grid three) inside her in,
it looked a tough call for
Crouch. Undaunted she made an
explosive start from grid four,
hammering round the first bend
and leaving her rivals in her
wake. Unexpectedly defending
champion Lamb found herself
caught up in traffic. By the
time she passed Michelle
Whitehead, Crouch and Lucy
Whitehead were away - the moment
and the title had gone.
Suddenly
the smart money was on Crouch.
She had to win her last race to
secure the title but was made to
fight every inch of the way by
gutsy Jacobs who pushed her all
the way. But win it she did.
As she crossed the finish line
Crouch punched the air in
celebration to seal a remarkable
double success.
Jess
Lamb beat Lauren Jacobs in a
tie-break for the silver medal
after both riders finished on 18
points. Second was not the pace
Lamb wanted to be. She took
defeat in the same way she
greeted victory, graciously and
professionally but deep down
inside, she'll be 'guttered' not
to have retained the title in
front of her home crowd.
Jacobs
on the other had must be
thrilled with her performance.
She really is a class act,
aggressive yet at the same time
cool and calm under pressure.
There was almost some serenity
to her racing. Sadly she
couldn't hold either Crouch or
Lamb from the gate, so bronze
behind the big two was just
about right.
Elsewhere Lucy Whitehead will be
bitterly disappointed not to be
in the medals, let alone regain
the title she won two years
ago. The immensely popular
Leicester rider never recovered
from her opening ride and simply
couldn't match team-mate Crouch
from the gate in heat 16.
Somehow, and this is not meant
unkindly, she seemed unusually
off the pace. Then again her
opponents are getting better and
better all the time and the gap
between Lucy and the rest is not
as wide as it was in 2006.
One
rider who really impressed was
Ipswich's Laura Dale. She was
always in the mix, putting
together a portfolio of a win
and four seconds. She executed
a wonderful pass on Michelle
Whitehead in heat 11 which
sealed the under-16s silver
medal, Whitehead going on to
take the bronze. Remarkably
Horspath's Rachel Edge's score
was identical, both riders
finishing on 16 points.
But in
the final analysis there was no
doubting the winner. Powerful
from the gate and able to win
the big points when it really
mattered, there is no disputing
that Amy Crouch was the best
rider on the day. Move over
Lucy and Jess - cycle speedway
has a new golden girl.