Home>News Center>Sports | ||
Australia's next generation hit by 'biggest tragedy'
BIGGEST TRAGEDY "It will take a long time to get over it," Victor told The Australian. "It's very devastating and potentially the biggest tragedy to have hit the sport in this country. "We were counting on them to take over the mantle in the years to come." The accident received widespread broadcast media coverage in Australia on Tuesday as the news became public, which was matched by the newspaper coverage on Wednesday. Sydney's Daily Telegraph newspaper had a large picture of Gillett, a former Olympic rower who switched to cycling in 2000, alongside the headline "Their tragic last ride". The Sydney Morning Herald also had a photo of Gillett and her five team mates on their front page with the headline "Cycling world ripped apart". It also had a large photograph of the accident scene with police markings vividly displayed. Melbourne's The Age newspaper also showed the aftermath of the accident scene, with ambulance personnel tending to the riders on stretchers under a headline of "Lives and dreams of gold shattered in the German countryside". Gillett, who had said her ambition was to win gold in the individual time trial at the 2006 Melbourne Commonwealth Games, lived near Ballarat in the state of Victoria. The team had been preparing for the Tour of Thuringen when the crash occurred near the town of Zeulenroda, about 80 km (50 miles) south of Leipzig, at about 1540 GMT on Monday.
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||