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Becky James: The rise of British Cycling's latest golden girl

She may have adorned the front and back pages of Monday morning's newspapers after a golden week in Minsk that has transformed her career, but as little as a week ago Becky James was a largely unknown name in mainstream Britain.

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Her performances put her firmly on British Cycling's radar and by 2009, aged 17, she was winning gold medals at the European Track Cycling Championships in the sprint and 500m TT. After adding two golds, in the sprint and keirin, at the Junior Track Cycling World Championships later that year, she was selected to represent Wales at the Commonwealth Games in Delhi the following summer and, despite still being only 18, brought home sprint silver and 500m TT bronze.
Staking a claim
Those outstanding performances highlighted James as one of Britain's brightest young sprint prospects, but with Pendleton still at the peak of her powers and fellow rising star Jess Varnish also staking a strong claim, places at the major senior championships were hard to come by. Like all of her peers, her ultimate aim was to be selected for London 2012, yet with Pendleton fighting for medals in the sprint, team sprint and keirin, and Varnish the preferred second rider in the team sprint, James had to settle for being named as a reserve for her home Olympics. The then 20-year-old was crushed and her pain was further exacerbated when it was suggest she would be better served going back to training rather than waiting around in the Olympic village. As expected, the call never came. However, that extra training set up gold medal-winning performances at Track Cycling World Cup events in Glasgow and Colombia, which in turn instilled a confidence in James that she could head to the world championships in Minsk and be competitive. She had no idea she would win an unprecedented four medals and come home with two rainbow jerseys, but not even James can deny that the potential she has now fulfilled has been there all along.

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