Netherlands disqualified after Team GB star gave the impression to be HEADBUTTED

  • Cyclist Wood looked to be headbutted forcing him to the Paris velodrome deck
  • Wood insisted it was just ‘a coming together’ but fans have voiced their outrage
  • The Netherlands were later disqualified for ‘improper conduct and behaviour’ 

The Netherlands were disqualified from the men’s Olympic madison final for behaviour that ‘endangers another rider’ after Britain’s Ollie Wood appeared to be headbutted amid tensions between the two nations in the velodrome. 

A day after ‘rugby on wheels’ came the butt on the bike as relations between British and Dutch riders took another aggressive turn on Saturday.

The flashpoint came with 40 laps remaining in the madison, when Team GB‘s Ollie Wood was suddenly catapulted into a hard fall after his helmet was struck from behind by that of Jan Willem van Schip.

It was inconclusive from television replays whether the contact was deliberate, though it looked ugly inside the velodrome, with the collision leaving Woods sprawled across the boards. 

He required a concussion assessment at trackside before continuing the 50km race and ultimately finishing 10th alongside Mark Stewart. The Netherlands were later disqualified for ‘improper conduct and behavior that endangers another rider (blow with the helmet)’.

Dutch rider Jan-Willem van Schip (above) looks to make contact with GB’s Oliver Wood (below)

Great Britain’s Ollie Woods hits the velodrome deck after colliding with a Dutch opponent

Wood (pictured) got back onto his bike in the men’s madison final, but looked hurt

The incident came 24 hours after Team GB’s Jack Carlin was accused by the Dutch of ‘rugby on wheels’ for a manoeuvre in which he veered up the track and into Dutchman Hoogland in the individual sprint. Fans from the Netherlands then booed Carlin when he later collected his bronze medal.

Naturally, the clash between Wood and Van Schip might be painted as retaliation, although the Brit admitted he had no idea how it occurred. 

After limping into the interview area with a heavily swollen knee, he said: ‘He hit me so hard. I felt like a crash test dummy.

‘I will survive. I didn’t see anything.’

Wood added: ‘It’s just a bit different when you get hit from behind – you don’t see it coming. There are a lot of people resting and riding at any one time. Instead of taking a high line around the track, I thought he’d cut it a bit fine and just ploughed into me.

‘I’ve not watched it back. I’m trying to catch my breath. I have no clue, absolutely no clue. All I know is I got hit really hard from behind by literally the biggest rider on the track.

‘Everyone’s cognitive functions started to decline rapidly at one given point – you could see there were people having laps of concentration. When there are people all over the track, it is inevitable that people are going to collide wheels or whatever.

‘I don’t know what I have done but my knee really hurts and my a*** really hurts.

‘I feel like I’ve been rear-ended by a lorry.’ 

While the crash was dramatic, it had little apparent influence on the pair’s medal prospects as they were already a long way short of the podium in the 200-lap bedlam of this format. Portugal took the gold from Italy and Denmark.

Six-time Olympic champion Chris Hoy, commentating for the BBC, blamed the Dutch for the collision, which saw Wood taking the inside lane on his down-lap and Van Schip attempting to pass him on the outside. Van Schip initially received no warning and Team GB did not protest, before the Netherlands were kicked out hours later.

‘It was clearly Van Schip’s error there,’ Hoy said. ‘You are trying to skim past the rider and not go too far on the bend but he misjudged it.

Wood had a concussion check after the clash which he said was like being a ‘crash test dummy’

Wood was riding in GB’s doomed men’s madison final alongside teammate, Mark Stewart

Spanish rider Albert Torres was sent flying after hitting Belgium’s Fabian Van de Bossche

‘He absolutely whacked him on the head. I would not be surprised if he is concussed from that. He would not be expecting it either. His body would be loose and completely relaxed and then out of nowhere getting a massive hit. I really felt for him there.

‘It is literally a millimetre of Lycra and you have a bit of polystyrene on your head and that’s it and you are travelling at 40mph plus. It is a tough sport.

‘We were just discussing how often an elite endurance rider crashes, it would be half a dozen times a year. Some of them are fine, you slide and you lose some skin but you could break a bone or get a concussion and disrupt your whole season. It is a tough sport.’

Laura Kenny added: ‘I was surprised like Chris said that he did not get a warning or even points taken off of him. The men’s madison is pretty much full gas. They would have been going full speed then.’

Some have billed the clash as retaliation after Jack Carlin was accused by the Dutch of ‘rugby on wheels’ for a manoeuvre against Jeffrey Hoogland in the individual sprint

Carlin, right, had been booed by Dutch fans when he received his bronze medal on Friday

Fans on social media hit out at Van Schip, accusing the Dutch rider of attempting to headbutt Wood.

‘What on earth was the Dutch rider doing in the Madison? He literally swerved and took Ollie Wood out for no reason,’ one fan posted.

‘That Madison was carnage, too many crashes, the Dutch guy who went out of his way to headbutt the Brit needs a dressing down. It was ridiculous. Changed line so that he could headbutt Oli Wood,’ another added.

‘That looked deliberate- it’s a headbutt. That should be disqualification,’ a third posted.

A fourth posted. ‘It looked like a deliberately headbutt and shoulder barge to the Brit who wasn’t in the race at the time.’

Van Schip did not comment on the incident, with the Dutchman not appearing in the mixed zone following the race.

His team-mate Yoeri Havik, speaking to Dutch media, blamed fatigue for the incident.

‘I didn’t see it, but I think it was more fatigue,’ Havik said.

‘I think Jan-Willem was exhausted.’