T&T’s Nicholas Paul suffered a broken collar bone in a fall en route to a fourth-placed finish in the Men’s Sprint when the 2022 Tissot UCI Track Nations Cup ended at the Sir Chris Hoy Velodrome in Glasgow, Scotland on Sunday.
A world record-holder in the Flying 200m with 9.100 seconds set at the Elite Pan American Championships in Bolivia, last year, Paul who made his Olympic debut at the 2020 Tokyo Games reaching the finals in both the Sprint and the Keirin was the second-fastest qualifier in the heats in 9.550 seconds, to trail Holland’s Harrie Lavreysen.
In the last-16 round, the T&T cyclist defeated Poland’s Rafal Sarnecki, the 18th qualifier.
He then defeated Suriname’s Jair Tjon En Fa in two straight rides despite suffering the fall before losing out to Australian Matthew Richardson by default due to the injury while Lavreysen won in two straight rides as well over France’s Sebastien Vigier
During the battled for the bronze, Paul was set to face Vigier, but defaulted due to the injury while Lavreysen won the gold in two of three rides.
On Saturday, Paul and Browne, who had training stints in Switzerland both ended their opening day of competition in the First Round Repercharge of the Keirin.
In the men’s Keirin First Round, Paul did not finish heat four which was won by Austrian Thomas Cornish while Japan’s Kyohei Shinzan, Canada’s Ryan Dodyk, Greece’s Kostantinos Livanos and Poland’s Daniel Rochna all finished ahead of Paul.
And in Heat Two, Kwesi Browne was fourth, to finish ahead of Canada’s Je’Land Sydney and Spain’s Alejandro Martize Chorro in a race won by favourite Harrie Lavreysen of Holland with Thailand’s Jai Angsuthasawit and Great Britain’s Jack Garlin second and third respectively.
In the Round One Repercharge the T&T duo again failed to advance as they both finished third in their respective heats.
Paul was third in heat two behind France’s Rayan Helal and Garlin while Browne finished behind France’s Melvin Landerneau and Poland’s Patryk Rajkowski.
Going into the opening day Browne was encouraged by his performances at the T&T National Championships in March, which included a blistering 10.106 seconds in the Flying 200m on his way to winning the individual Sprint and Keirin titles.
Akil Campbell, one of T&T’s top wheelmen, was forced to miss the opening leg due to difficulty in attaining his travel documents.
The 26-year-old had won gold in the men’s scratch race at the most recent Nations Cup leg in Cali, Colombia, last September, a performance that earned him a debut World Championships appearance in France in October 2021.
The development left s Campbell to reassess his early-season plans as this Nations Cup event was supposed to see him elevating his preparations for the Commonwealth Games and Tissot UCI Track Cycling World Championships later this year.
Campbell says he had hoped to compete in Scotland, miss the next leg in Milton, Canada, from May 12-15 and resume competition in Cali, Colombia (July 7-10) leading to the Commonwealth Games at the end of July in Birmingham, England.
The T&T trio will be vying for points throughout the Nations Cup season which will count towards the allotment of qualification quotas for the 2022 Tissot UCI Track World Championships in Montigny-le-Bretonneux, France from October 12-16 and further ahead - the Olympic Games in Paris 2024.
This first Nations Cup in Scotland will be followed by meets in Milton, Canada (May 12-15) and Cali, Colombia (July 7-10).
In each event, the stars of track cycling will vie for singular victories and for cumulated points that will be essential to their National Federations’ qualification quotas for the UCI Track World Championships and, in the longer term, the Olympic Games, as a new cycle begins towards Paris 2024.