ELANCOURT, France — Tom Pidcock stepped down from the top step of an Olympic podium for the second time, the British anthem giving way to cheers from even the French fans, and spotted a blown-up cardboard photo of his face held aloft by one of the spectators.
Pidcock took it and gave it a sheepish wave after a decidedly outsized performance of his own.
After a punctured tire cost him the lead in the Olympic mountain bike race, the 24-year-old from Leeds recovered to track down Victor Koretzky. The two engaged in a dramatic last-lap game of cat-and-mouse, and with an audacious move where a single lane split into two, Pidock squeezed ahead and pulled away for his second straight gold medal.
''What I'm feeling right now is a bit all over the place. All I know is that I did whatever I could in that race to win,'' he said. "The Olympics is the biggest thing for me and to be able to just still pull that off despite what happened is pretty incredible.''
The mountain bike judges closely examined the final pass, where Pidcock went left around a tree, Koretzky went right, and they bumped when they came back together — Koretzky nearly hitting another tree. But result was allowed to stand.
Koretzky was left with a silver medal, one day after Pauline Ferrand-Prevot delivered gold for France in the women's race. Alan Hatherly wound up with bronze in the best mountain bike finish ever for South Africa.
"We all want the gold and we all fight for the gold," Koretzky said. ''After his puncture, Tom showed he was very strong today."
Pidcock, who had to withdraw from the Tour de France about two weeks ago when he contracted COVID-19, joined Paola Pezzo and Julien Absalon as the only riders with two mountain bike gold medals from the Summer Games.