Just under four months after the freak fall in her garden that left her with a broken leg and ripped ligaments, and which ruled her out of the Paris Olympics, Katie Archibald is set to make a lightning-fast return to elite competition next week, after being named in the Great Britain squad for the track world championships in Denmark.
The double Olympic gold medallist tripped over her garden step in June, breaking two bones in her lower leg, suffering severe ligament damage, and dislocating her ankle. The 30-year-old was, unsurprisingly, forced to miss what would have been her third Olympic Games, amid fears that her season had been prematurely cut short.
> Team GB star Katie Archibald set to miss Paris Olympics after tripping over garden step and breaking leg, ripping ligaments, and dislocating ankle in “cruel” fall
However, after four months of recovery and rehabilitation, Archibald is, somehow, ready to race at the highest level again, and was today named in GB’s women’s endurance squad for next week’s track worlds in Ballerup, Denmark, alongside team pursuit bronze medallists from Paris, Josie Knight, Anna Morris and Jess Roberts, as well as madison silver medallist Neah Evans, Meg Barker, and Sophie Lewis.
In an interview with Daniel Benson today, the five-time world champion described her call-up, less than four months after her Paris hopes were dashed, her “happiest selection”.
“When you’re young you’ve not been grafting for that long to make something happen,” she said. “I don’t think that you appreciate it that much, so my first World Championships selection was special but a bit ‘air-headed’, I suppose. This was something I really worked for but wasn’t guaranteed. It feels really good.”
The speed of Archibald’s return to fitness and competition – last week she posted that she was “thriving” on the bike – owes much to GB’s head of performance Stephen Park, who swiftly nipped in the bud the 30-year-old’s hopes of still making the Olympics so soon after her freak fall, a rather naïve ambition which possibly could have derailed her entire season and more.
(Will Palmer/SWpix.com)
“At first I didn’t actually think that it would be as big of a challenge as it has proven to be,” she told Benson. “I don't think that I took the medical feedback as seriously as I should have at the start because I was told super quickly that I wouldn’t go to the Games but the speed with which that information came to me almost made me disbelieve it.
“I thought there was still a chance. It’s not that I was naïve but when you’ve got so much emotion tied up into an outcome you don’t assess it as rationally as you do with other things.”
She continued: “After I had the surgery I could stand on my leg in seven days. I felt like I had progressed way more than the original surgeon's feedback so I made the mistake of amplifying that out and thinking that if I’ve gone double speed then, I can do it again and again each week.
“It was after seven days when I was making calls about the selection and I asked Sparky [Park] if I could be considered a non-travelling reserve, which would keep my options open for the Games.”
(Alex Whitehead/SWpix.com)
However, Park advised Archibald to shelve any attempt to get fit for Paris, guidance the Scottish rider now says with hindsight was the “biggest kindness”, which instead afforded her the time and space to get fit for next week’s worlds.
“From that point, I could just be enthused by the progress that I did make because it wasn’t tied to the Games,” she said. “He basically let himself be the villain, so it wasn’t a particularly happy conversation but it did feel like something melted away with the pressure disappearing, because deep down I knew that I had some spaghetti in a bag for a leg and that it wasn’t going to happen.
“It feels like I’ve graduated this week in terms of tick boxes for progression. It’s a really nice feeling at the moment. I had five team pursuit sessions and then five turbo sessions that were all geared around power for Madison racing.
“Those are my two targets at worlds and so I had that final turbo session to hit those numbers that would have meant I wouldn’t have climbed off halfway through. It was quite a low bar that I’ve set myself but that’s where I am at the moment.
> SUV driver pulls out of junction and crashes into Olympic champion Katie Archibald
“I really hope that I’ve just had the worst two years of all my years. There were lessons I took from previous injuries, like the first time I went through a serious rehab experience. That taught me so much that I could apply to my normal training and the relationships with people around me.
“I’m done now. I’ve gone through too many of these. I’ve had concussions, I’ve had ligament and bone damage. I’ve had surgeries, I’ve broken my back, and I’m pretty done with new insights.”
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This is just pedant baiting, isn't it?
Strava's new AI summaries have been rubbish for me so far, things like:
- "You crushed your typical distance". I didn't, it was shorter than normal
- "Consistent training is paying off". I've been inconsistent for months
- "Your heart rate peaked at 160bpm, highest in 14 days, indicating a challenging effort". False on 2 counts!
It's utter shit. I feel like Strava has lost their way in introducing features with any meaningful benefit.
at least you can turn the AI bullshit off
Thankfully, as a free account holder [with no interest in going 'premium'], this "feature" is disabled by default.
Thankful, as ever, for small mercies.
That sounds to me like you've been consistently inconsistent
Forgive me if this is the bleedin' obvious, but AIUI Strava records your times and distances so you can pore over your rides and work out what you did wrong (or right)?
So why on earth do you need an AI to provide summaries of this information?
This is like the AI "assistant" that Amazon has added to their app (rubbish IMO), or the AI functionality (apparently) on the latest iPhone so you don't actually need to read emails any more (you just get the AI to generate a Cliffs Notes version and trust that it is doing it right).
These companies are all so keen to add AI because they know that they can, that they don't stop to think whether they should.
"freak garden accident"? It could have been worse, it could have been a bizarre garden accident, best left unsolved.
To be fair the gravel world's course would have been a mudfest had it rained. As it was, Paris Tours presented a comical contrast.
Paris-Roubaix will always be the 'gravel' Worlds to me. Always. The OG mixed-terrain drop bar bike race.
... I wonder if Pogacar will ever win that one. He says he will race it one day.