Pauline Ferrand-Prevot delivered France’s second gold medal of the Paris Olympics as she took a high-quality field apart to win the women’s cross-country mountain bike race yesterday.The 32-year-old produced a devastating acceleration at the start of the second of seven laps around the dusty 4.4km circuit on Elancourt Hill and rode solo to victory.Haley Batten of the United States and Jenny Rissveds of Sweden were involved in a fierce scrap for silver, with Batten bursting clear to finish runner-up, two minutes 57 seconds back. Young Dutchwoman Puck Pieterse was the only rider who looked capable of making it a race and was alone in second place when she suffered a puncture on lap five and needed a wheel change.She fought back to finish fourth ahead of Britain’s former world champion Evie Richards.Ferrand-Prevot, who will return to road racing after the Olympics, is a five-times cross-country world champion but suffered heartbreak at the last two Olympics when favourite.She failed to finish the race in Rio de Janeiro and in Tokyo she crashed and suffered a puncture, coming in 10th.It was little wonder then that the tears were flowing after she reigned supreme in the hills near Versailles, embracing her team and family and pretty much everyone else in the chaotic finishing area.After receiving her medal she made her way through a long line of TV and media interviews before holding up the tricolore flag towards hundreds of chanting fans, making a heart with her hands and closing her eyes to let the moment sink in.“After so many years and after so much hard work, winning today was like a dream day,” she told reporters. “I was on a mission today. After the warmup I knew it was my day today.“On the last lap I knew I had a huge gap so I was slowing down because I was saying ‘You don’t have to make a mistake’.“I was flying today.”