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Japanese track medallists fined – for doing victory lap on road bikes

“It’s easier to hold the flags on a road bike!” says one of pair who fell foul of commissaires at Asian Games

Two Japanese track cyclists who took gold and silver medals after fighting out the individual sprint final at the Asian Games in Incheon, South Korea on Tuesday have been fined as a result of their celebration – because they did a lap of honour on road, not track bikes.

Seiichiro Nakagawa beat team mate Tomoyuki Kawabata 2-0 to win gold, reports AFP, with the pair swapping to road bikes to parade the Japanese flag on their victory lap. Commissaires took a dim view, however, and the pair were each slapped with a 50 Swiss Francs fine.

Kawabata, aged 29, said afterwards: “It’s easier to hold the flags on a road bike!”

The 34-year-old Nakagawa added: “We didn’t know we had been fined. Whatever we did, we’re sorry.”

He added: “I’m 34 and this is my first Asian Games gold – my goal is to win a medal in the next Olympics.”

The pair aren’t the first riders to get into trouble as a result of a victory celebration.

On the road, Mark Cavendish was withdrawn from the Tour de Romandie in 2010 by his then HTC-Colombia team for “inappropriate gestures” after he made a V-sign as he crossed the line to win stage 2 of the race.

It was his second win of the year after what had been a disappointing start to the season as the Manxman struggled to recover from an infection following dental surgery.

He said the gesture was aimed at people who “know jack shit about cycling” after he and his team came under criticism for a lacklustre start to the season.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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5 comments

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kevinmorice | 9 years ago
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Fined a whole £32 each! Why is that even a story?

I do find it strange that they finish their race, then bother to dismount, get on their other bikes and then come back out on track to do another lap though. Surely if you are doing a victory lap you take it immediately after the race, rather than faff about for a few minutes first?

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Al__S | 9 years ago
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I don't know much about velodromes but I though "thou shall not take a road bike, no matter how clean, onto the track" was pretty much a commandment handed down by god?

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hectorhtaylor replied to Al__S | 9 years ago
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Al__S wrote:

I don't know much about velodromes but I though "thou shall not take a road bike, no matter how clean, onto the track" was pretty much a commandment handed down by god?

If it had been in North Korea they would have been licking t' road clean with t' tongue.

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Nick T | 9 years ago
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Because you aren't riding fixed and you aren't horizontal holding the track bars in the drops, I'd imagine.

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portec | 9 years ago
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Kawabata, aged 29, said afterwards: “It’s easier to hold the flags on a road bike!”

How is it easier to hold a flag on a road bike than a track bike? Are they sure it's not just because they were using their road bikes to warm down and couldn't be a**ed going and getting their track bikes to do the lap of honour?

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