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Mark Cavendish has been warned by team selectors that he must finish in the top three at next week’s World Track Championships to remain in contention for a place in Great Britain’s squad for the Olympic Games in Rio.
The multiple Tour de France stage winner has declared his intention to compete in the multi-event omnium in Brazil in early August as he seeks to win a first ever Olympic medal.
But first he faces the World Championships at Lee Valley Velodrome in London, the scene of the 2012 Olympics, where he must prove his form in the omnium starting a week on Friday.
“For Cav to be in Rio he needs to perform well next week,” said GB technical director Shane Sutton.
“He would be expecting that of himself. Otherwise he would rule himself out.
“And if he can’t make the top three in the world I would think he would put his hand up and go back and pursue his dreams of the leader’s yellow jersey and winning stages on the Tour de France.
“I believe he can do it, we wouldn’t have selected him otherwise. That’s not us being brutal, that’s Cav being Cav, probably the greatest road sprinter of all time. He needs to know he can go to Rio and get the medal.”
The crux of Great Britain’s issue remains Cavendish’s desire to do well in the Tour de France, an event in which he has won an astonishing 26 stages during his career.
But his track coaches remain unconvinced that the 30-year-old can take part in one of the sport’s most gruelling events throughout July and then hit peak form in Rio in August, with only two weeks between the end of the Tour and the start of the Olympics.
“Mark knows what is needed, I’m not talking to a little kid, he knows he has to prioritise,” said mens’ endurance coach Heiko Salzwedel. He added: “If you ask me realistically, riding for two or three weeks on the Tour de France, he might be fit for the (Olympic) road race but not for the Olympic omnium. Cav has to digest and make a decision about this.”
Cavendish himself has remained adamant, since declaring his interest in riding at the Olympics, that he can balance his commitments between his national team and his new professional road outfit Team Dimension Data.
The Manx rider has never won an Olympic medal, having missed out in Beijing in 2008 where he failed to medal in the now-defunct Madison event, riding with countryman Bradley Wiggins.
“I haven’t won an Olympic medal yet. I would quite like to do that this year,” said Cavendish.
“It’s not like we pay a pound to racing on a Sunday in a club races or we are out after work training. We are professional bike riders, it’s our job.
“It’s different from professional bike riding. I am definitely proud to represent my country.
Cavendish added: “I have always wanted to be the best that I can be. I wasn’t always the best at everything but wanted to be. “I enjoy riding my bike. That is why I train, I race, I still love it.
“The winning bit is built-in and part of my nature. I am watching everything I am eating because I am doing the track.”
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