Keirin

Keirin is a track cycling event in which a small group of cyclists sprints for victory. In the first few laps, the cyclists are paced by a motorised vehicle called a derny, which leaves the track a few laps before the end, at a speed of about 50 km/h. The first to finish the race is the winner. In championships, this event is conducted in several rounds. Eliminated cyclists get the opportunity try again in the repechages. Keirin began in 1948 in Japan, and has great popularity there. It is a professional sport and the Japanese place bets on the outcome of the Keirin races. In spite of its popularity, Japanese cyclists do not usually feature in the medal contenders for this event at international tournaments. Aspiring Keirin racers compete for entrance into Japan Keirin School. The 10% of applicants fortunate enough to be accepted then undergo a strict, 15-hour per day, training regime. Those who pass the graduation exams, and are approved by the Japan Keirin Association become eligible for Keirin races. Keirin racing became an event at the 2000 Summer Olympics in 2000 at Sydney, Australia.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
the crying game
the sixth sense
thirty years' war
talking head
table tennis
partial test ban treaty
tribune
track
tocantins
train
tambo
tunnels and trolls
trombetas
tigre
twelve bar blues
trimalchio
the tube
tetrahedron
trigonometry
track cycling
individual pursuit
team pursuit
track time trial
points race
madison (cycling)
sprint (cycling)
tetragrammaton
turing completeness
the shawshank redemption
the residents
tacitus on jesus
the fantasy trip
theoretical astrophysics
taliban
terrorism
thomas malory
the black cat (short story)
peaches
golden brown
buzzcocks
the devil in the belfry
tidal acceleration
timor
tetracycline