Sports

Olympic medallist, Tour de France champion Geraint Thomas to retire at end of season

Olympic medallist, Tour de France champion Geraint Thomas to retire at end of season

Geraint Thomas, the former Tour de France champion who also won gold medals in track cycling for Great Britain at the Olympic Games in 2008 and ‘12, announced Monday that this will be his final year as a professional.

Thomas, a loyal teammate with a tremendous appetite for victory who transformed into a leader over his almost two-decade career, said he will focus on the Tour this summer with Ineos Grenadiers.

“Since I was a kid, I dreamt of riding the Tour and being part of the Olympics and winning was obviously a dream as well, but to achieve that was just nuts,” he told BBC Breakfast.

“I think now the decision is official, you do start to reflect because when you’re in it, it’s just one thing after the next, year after year, so you don’t really appreciate it,” he added.

Growing up on the outskirts of Cardiff, Wales, he started bike racing at 10, and his exceptional qualities did not remain unnoticed for long.

Thomas’s first successes came on the track. In 2006, he was the youngest member of the British pursuit team that competed at the world championships. In 2008, he won the Olympic gold medal alongside Bradley Wiggins. Four years later, in London, with a second gold medal secured in the same event, Thomas left track cycling to focus on road racing.

He had already shown immense skills on the road from winning the Paris-Roubaix junior race in 2004. His initial ambitions on the road were to perform at one-day classics; then he rode the 2007 Tour.

Riding for the Barloworld team at the time, Thomas was the youngest cyclist to start that 2007 Tour when it began from London. Thomas, who is nicknamed “G″ in the peloton, finished 140th, second to last. Three years later, at the 2010 Tour, he wore the white jersey for the best young rider for one stage.

Years later, his potential as a Grand Tour winner truly emerged when he won the week-long Paris-Nice in 2016. That victory ahead of two-time Tour de France winner Alberto Contador was a turning point.

But Thomas went through pain and injuries the next season, being forced to retire from the Tour and the Giro because of crashes. He still wore the yellow jersey at the Tour after winning the opening time trial but broke his collarbone in a downhill crash in the Alps.

In 2018, the year he won the Tour, Thomas started the race to help Chris Froome try and win for a record-equaling fifth time. But Froome crashed in the first stage and lost time, then cracked in the Pyrenees, while Thomas’ tremendous form was rewarded with impressive wins in the Alps. He won back-to-back mountain stages and became the first British rider to win at the Alpe d’Huez.

“Beijing was massive, my first Olympics and winning gold there,” Thomas said. “But the Tour’s what changed my life, being recognised all over the place. The yellow jersey is iconic. You go anywhere in the world, and people will know the yellow jersey, how it signifies cycling and its history. So to be a part of that history and to win it, I just pinch myself.”

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may also like

Sports

New Zealand Rugby referees embark on training mission to boost SL rugby standards

New Zealand Rugby referees embark on training mission to boost SL rugby standards A delegation of seasoned New Zealand rugby
Sports

Asalanka and Hasaranga guide SL to victory against visiting New Zealand Team

Asalanka and Hasaranga guide SL to victory against visiting New Zealand Team In a challenging chase of 136 runs, Sri