Jason Kenny deposed as Olympic mens sprint champion
Jason Kenny bid farewell to the Olympic menâs sprint title he has held since London 2012 as he was beaten in the quarter-finals.
Kenny had earlier needed a repechage to get beyond the 1/8 finals after being beaten by Denis Dmitriev, but lived to fight another day as he saw off Azizulhasni Awang and Yuto Wakimoto â" two riders he had already beaten in Wednesdayâs round.
But it was only a temporary reprieve as the 33-year-old from Farnworth, now Britainâs most decorated Olympian after Tuesdayâs team sprint silver, was beaten in the first two races of the best-of-three quarter-final against Harrie Lavreysen at the Izu velodrome.
He would then come last in the placement race in the menâs sprint to finish eighth in the competition overall â" with the winner to be determined on Friday.
âI was just taking it one ride at a time but once I (lost) against Dmitriev it was hard, the repechage was absolutely savage and then I was straight back up against the fastest guys in the field,â he said.
âIt was always going to be tough from then on. Itâs one of those things. Itâs just where I am physically at the minute.
âI donât expect to be the fastest in the world every time. Itâs really hard to win at the end of the day. It was a really hard five years and it will be really hard tomorrow for whoever takes it.â
On Wednesday the six-time Olympic champion had admitted he was struggling to recover from the exertions of the team sprint competition, and sounded like a man who knew he was about to hand over his crown.
Instead he called team-mate Jack Carlin Britainâs best chance of getting a medal in the event, and the Scot duly advanced to the semis as he beat Germanyâs Maximilian Levy 2-0.
Kenny still has one final event, the keirin, to come at the Tokyo Games.
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