Charlotte Ross on The Olympics and what it means for cyclists:
It is an encouraging start.
The revolution in attitudes toward cyclists will surely come with better cycle lanes, stiffer penalties for bad drivers and more bike stands. huge efforts are finally being made to improve swimming in London but at the moment only one 50m olympic-length pool is open, and competitive swimmers must make do with shorter-length pools or freezing lidos.
of course, there's a world of difference between the lifetime of training it takes to create a worldclass athlete and a saturday swim or a daily commute. But enthusiasm for any sport is born at street level, and that's where our new role models come in.
Last year Bradley Wiggins whizzed past me in a Languedoc hamlet on the Tour de France.
The whole village, from toddlers to great grandmothers, cheered him on.
The galvanising power of sport is that it reaches out to people on every level.
2012 will do that for Londoners, if we harness their olympic spirit now. Memories of Beijing will keep me on my bike and at the pool for the next four years, and I'm sure I won't be alone. Roll on 2012.
http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/stand...ling+as+fast+as+I+can+towards+2012/article.do
I've seen similar comments lately, I honestly don't think this is a flash in the pan, interest is surging, interviews with cyclists show that they are normal, reasonable and balanced people. It all humanises us I reckon.