Triple Olympic champion Ed Clancy provides the inside story on British Cycling’s track tech, from 2008 to 2024

By George Scott

Published: Monday, 05 August 2024 at 14:00 PM


Ed Clancy has been there, won it and got the Olympic gold medals.

Clancy forged a reputation as the best team pursuit specialist in the world, through a career that spanned four Olympic Games. At three of them – Beijing 2008, London 2012 and Rio 2016 – he won gold in the team pursuit as part of a Team GB squad that has dominated the past two decades of track cycling.

Alongside the likes of Sir Chris Hoy, Laura Kenny and Jason Kenny, Clancy has been one of Great Britain’s leading lights on the track. He’s a rider who has had the full British Cycling experience, having been talent-spotted as a 15-year-old, before graduating from the Academy programme, securing a haul of gold medals and world records that few can match, and ending his career in 2021.

Clancy lived and breathed British Cycling’s marginal gains philosophy as the only ever-present member of the team pursuit squad that won back-to-back-to-back Olympic titles from 2008 to 2016. He’s also a rider who describes himself as “mad for it” and was happy to be used as a “guinea pig” when it came to testing and adopting the tech that made him as fast as possible on the track.

With the Paris 2024 track cycling programme starting today (Monday 5 August) at the Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines velodrome, we caught up with Clancy for an episode of the BikeRadar Podcast, to learn more about the tech story that underpinned the 39-year-old’s career. From the world’s best aerodynamic expertise to space-age bike design, tech innovations helped British Cycling set the pace for others to follow for much of Clancy’s career.

Clancy talked us through his early relationship with British Cycling’s now-famous Secret Squirrel Club. He shed some light on the conveyor belt of tech that helped him get faster with each Olympic gold medal, some of the equipment frustrations that surfaced later in his career, the impact of the change in leadership at British Cycling, and how the team pursuit – and the tech behind it – has evolved in the build-up to Paris.