CONSETT'S Mica McNeill has set the bar for success at breaking her own British bobsleigh record at the Winter Olympics in Beijing.

The 28-year-old finished eighth alongside Mica Moore at Pyeongchang 2018, the best ever result by a female Team GB crew.

Four years on, and with former Olympic sprinter Montell Douglas in the brake-woman seat, McNeill won’t settle for anything but a better result in the two-woman event that begins with two runs tomorrow and concludes with a final two runs on Saturday.

The Northern Echo: Mica McNeill and her bobsleigh partner Montell DouglasMica McNeill and her bobsleigh partner Montell Douglas

“We have spoken about it and we want to go out there and make British history again,” said McNeill, who was forced to crowd-fund her way to the last Winter Games.

“We did it in 2018 and it's something that we want to beat again. A lot of work goes in, in the past four years, and we hope it's going to be reflected.

“Everyone's going to be striving for a medal but we'd be so proud to walk away with four amazing pushes, four amazing drives.

“To walk off that ice and say we've given it everything, that's what we want to feel.”

The pair made a confident start to life in Beijing, finishing third-fastest in the first two training runs to fuel hope of another historic result.

Read more: Mica McNeill builds a bobsleigh track at her Consett home

McNeill qualified her sled for the Games thanks to a last-minute World Cup silver alongside shot putter Adele Nicoll in Sigulda, Britain’s first top-level podium in 13 years.

The Northern Echo: Mica's bobsleighMica's bobsleigh

Douglas was preferred when Games selection came around and makes her Winter Olympic debut, having been an alternate in Pyeongchang.

She is the first woman to represent Team GB at both Summer and Winter Games, having competed in the 100m at Beijing 2008.

British sliders have struggled on the world’s only 360-degree track in Yanqing.

The four-strong skeleton squad failed to bring home a medal for the first time in the sport’s history, and McNeill’s male counterpart, Brad Hall, crashed in the men’s two-man event.

McNeill is confident that she has left no stone unturned to get the measure of conditions.

“We have spent four years and particularly the Olympic year preparing for this one race,” she said.

“We came to the test event in October and spent a lot of time learning the driving lines, getting the track gradient for the push, testing runners, testing set-ups.

“You just have to trust that you've done everything you can now and go out and perform.

“There are so many elements in bobsleigh and you need to put everything together to get that result we want.”

McNeill and Douglas first teamed up for a World Cup race in 2017 and the North-East star has paid tribute to her team-mate’s drive and determination to succeed in the winter sport environment after previously excelling in athletics.

“We both bring our own outlooks to the partnership,” said McNeill, who is a former Junior Olympic gold medallist. “ We’re both just grafters.

“A lot of times you'll see brake-men and women just duck out at the end of a season but Monty will be there with me, when World Championships are over, going back to the plan and testing equipment and doing all of this extra stuff.

“We’ve built a team together and we've made sure we've done everything that we can.

“We've become amazing friends over the last five years and it's such a nice journey to the Olympics together.”

* Watch All the Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022 live on discovery+ , Eurosport and Eurosport app.