Becky James wins keirin gold at World Championships
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Becky James stormed to victory in the keirin for her second world title in 24 hours as she became the first British rider to win four medals at a single World Championships.
The 21-year-old did not get much sleep after winning world sprint gold on Saturday before returning to the track.
She came through two races and led the final from the start to triumph.
Laura Trott had to settle for omnium silver with the Olympic champion, losing her world title to Sarah Hammer.
But Britain's young team still end the week on top of the medal table in Minsk with nine in total, including five golds, to make a confident start on the road to the Rio Olympics in 2016.
Anna Meares was the last female rider to win four medals at a single World Championships, in Melbourne in 2012, while Victoria Pendleton's best was three, which she managed on three occasions from 2007 to 2009.
"Oh my gosh. I can't believe it. Wow. It's going to take a good week for it to sink in, or two weeks, or a month," a dumbfounded James said.
"I just need someone to pinch me and tell me if it's really happening to me. I feel like it's a complete dream apart from the pain in my legs."
James, from Abergavenny, was in action for the fifth straight day in Minsk but did not look tired as she sped to victory in her heat, then showed her tactical nous to squeeze through the field to make it through her semi-final.
She made the final look easy, leading out from the start and holding off Jinjie Gong of China and Lisandra Guerra Rodriguez of Cuba.
Trott, who took team pursuit gold on Thursday, also clambered back on to the podium, although this time it was not to the top step.
A poor performance in the points race on Saturday, when she finished 10th, proved decisive and, although she bettered American Hammer's results in two of the final three events on Sunday, she could not make up the lost ground.
Hammer is the individual pursuit world champion and after she had finished first in her specialist discipline, third and fourth places by Trott in the scratch race and time trial were not enough to reel the American in.
Trott, 20, who had already won team pursuit gold this week told BBC Sport: "A better rider beat me on the day. What more can I do?
"After the points race, I am happy to come away with a medal, so to end up with silver I am super happy."
There were no British men left in the final stages of the men's individual sprint after Jason Kenny, Matt Crampton and Philip Hindes were eliminated on Saturday.
Germany's Stefan Botticher took gold, after beating Russia's Denis Dmitriev 2-0 in their best-of-three battle, with France's Francois Pervis taking bronze.
Kenny lost in the quarter-finals but the 24-year-old from Bolton had the consolation of knowing he had beaten the new world champion in round two, before Botticher progressed via the repechage.
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