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Great Britain's Jess Varnish and Victoria Pendleton missed out on a ride-off for Olympic gold after being relegated by officials for a takeover infringement on an eventful opening evening of track action at the London 2012 velodrome.
Varnish and Pendleton had set a world record in the two-woman, two-lap event in qualifying, seeing the mark broken moments later by China.
The Britons set the second fastest time in the first round and were due to advance to the final against China, who set another world record, but officials ruled against them.
Head in hands: Victoria Pendleton buried her face in a towel after learning of the disqualification
Unhappy ending: Jess Varnish (left) and Victoria Pendleton missed out on the big race after relegation
Pendleton was set to resume competition in the keirin on Friday, but for Varnish, who has focused on the starting lap in the event, the Games are over.
It meant Germany were promoted to the final against China, with Australia and Holland to contest bronze.
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry arrived after the drama to a full to capacity velodrome, featuring an expectant crowd.
A tearful Pendleton, crowned the queen of the track after her Beijing sprint success, had no qualms with the decision, while 21-year-old Varnish was so devastated she opted out of media duties.
Speedsters: Victoria Pendleton (left) and Jess Varnish in the team sprint qualifying
Pendleton said: 'It was an illegal change. I came through in the change zone about a metre too early; we're talking about one hundredth of a second of a mistake there.
'Jess moved up a fraction too early and I just saw the door and went for it, because that's my cue to try to squeeze underneath her as quickly as possible.
'It's one of those things that happens. It's quicker than a blink of an eye.
'You have to stick by the rules. The rules are there to make it a fair sport.
'Unfortunately we fell on the wrong side of that today. It wasn't intentional, obviously.'
British Cycling performance director Dave Brailsford was seen speaking to race officials and reviewing video footage, with Britain's ride being scrutinised, but there was no right to appeal.
Lap it up: Great British rider Victoria Pendleton waves to the crowd at the start of qualifying
Pendleton told the BBC: 'We didn't change over in the right zone of the track. It's really hard when you're going that speed.
'We've never really had an illegal change before. It's not something we've been too concerned about in the past but it's just one of those things that happens. It's not Jess' fault, it's not my fault - we're both partly to blame, really.
'We were probably just a bit too overwhelmed by the whole thing, a bit excited about our ride and just a bit too eager. We should have just kept a lid on it.
'It's just one of those things. Now and again rubbish things happen and this is one of those days.
'On the whole we've had a really excellent run. We were very pleased with our time. We were both hoping to go faster, a little bit of a gear change in the final.'
High hopes: But Varnish will have to wait four years for a crack at Olympic glory
For more than two years Varnish has focused on the single lap at the start of the team sprint.
Pendleton was adamant her young team-mate will recover.
The 31-year-old from Stotfold, who is set to retire after the Olympics, said: 'It's not quite her Games over because she's going to have many more Olympic Games to go to, I'm sure. This is the end for me but it's just the beginning for Jess.
'It's an amazing opportunity for her and an experience to make the most of what it's like to be in an Olympic environment. I'm 100 per cent sure Jess will go into Rio and absolutely smash it.'
Pendleton's final competition of her track career is set to continue on Friday in the motor-paced keirin, an event in which she won the world title in 2007 but has had limited success since.
The individual sprint - in which Pendleton is a six-time world champion and defending Olympic champion - begins on Sunday and concludes on Tuesday's final day of competition.
Dejected: Pendleton and Varnish share a hug
'The only positive is I know my form is really good because that's by far the fastest second lap I've ever done and then I backed it up with the second ride,' Pendleton added.
'All I can do now is keep my head down, focus on tomorrow, the following sprint competition the day after that and give it everything I've got.'
Jason Kenny and Sir Chris Hoy entered the corresponding men's event as defending champions and teamed up with 19-year-old German-born Philip Hindes.
Hindes had a disastrous start to his Olympic career in the fifth and final heat against Germany.
The teenager wobbled out of the start gate and lost control of his bike before tumbling to the track at the beginning of the first bend as team-mates Kenny and Hoy rolled past him.
Round and round: Victoria Pendleton and Jess Varnish were two of the main attractions in the Velodrome on Thursday
Britain were poised to get a second opportunity but it was an unsettling start. The hosts' rivals had already thrown down the gauntlet.
Russia trio Sergey Borisov, Denis Dmitriev and Sergey Kucherov clocked 43.681 in the third heat, quicker than the Olympic-winning mark in Beijing.
France trio Gregory Bauge, Michael D'Almeida and Kevin Sireau went quicker, lowering the Olympic record to 43.097.
Wheels came off: Philip Hindes took a tumble at the start of qualifying but picked himself up
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