Earlier within the day, Anna Morris picked up her third medal of the Championships with a perfectly-timed remaining dash within the ladies’s factors race.
Morris added to her particular person pursuit gold and bronze within the staff pursuit.
“I am actually, actually completely satisfied. I wasn’t positive when it completed – I believed it was prime 5 however my coach advised me I used to be second,” Morris mentioned.
“It has been a strong week on the entire.”
In the meantime, Matt Richardson – who switched allegiance from Australia to Nice Britain final 12 months – additionally took house a silver medal on the ultimate day after developing brief towards long-time rival Harrie Lavreysen of the Netherlands within the males’s dash remaining.
Lavreysen received the primary race by 0.094secs and was 0.050secs away from Richardson within the second to seal his seventh consecutive world championship gold within the occasion.
Within the males’s madison, Mark Stewart and Josh Tarling positioned second behind Belgian duo Lindsay de Vylder and Fabio van den Bossche, amassing 73 factors – eight fewer than the champions – within the 200-lap race.
That took Nice Britain’s remaining medal haul to 14 – profitable 4 gold, eight silver and two bronze – however they completed second to the Netherlands within the total desk.
Chatting with BBC Sport, GB dash coach and seven-time Olympic champion Sir Jason Kenny mentioned: “We have missed out on some medals that we felt we might have been aggressive for, however we have come away with a extremely good haul with some new medallists, so it is actually thrilling.
“The truth that we had been on the rostrum greater than ever reveals that we had been aggressive throughout the board, and it is actually optimistic.
“Subsequent 12 months’s World Championships will go in direction of Olympic qualification so issues will begin getting actually severe, and I feel given the age profile of the staff – and the truth that we’re so aggressive in so many occasions – is a extremely good place to begin the Olympic journey.”
