Chris Boardman
Quick Facts
Biography
Christopher Miles Boardman, MBE (born 26 August 1968) is a British former racing cyclist who won an individual pursuit gold medal at the 1992 Summer Olympics, broke the world hour record three times, and won three stages and wore the yellow jersey on three separate occasions at the Tour de France. In 1992, he was awarded an MBE for services to cycling.
Boardman's nickname is "The Professor", for his meticulous attention to detail in preparation and training, and his technical know-how. He had an altitude tent built in his house to help him prepare for the hour record attempt, although in an interview he claimed that all it did was help him focus. Boardman focused on interval training. He was a keen user of power measuring devices. For his winning ways in time trials and prologues of stage races, he was also nicknamed "Mr. Prologue".
Boardman is also notable for having used the Lotus 108 time trial bicycle designed by Mike Burrows and made by the sports car manufacturer Lotus. Later he worked with the UK carbon fibre bike specialist Hotta, to produce other time-trial frame designs, which he raced in various events including world championships, and Olympic games. He is now involved in producing commercial and competition bikes with the Boardman Bikes and Boardman Elite ventures.
Early life and amateur career
He was educated at Hilbre High School in Wirral, Merseyside, and rode in his first bike race at the age of 13. He was on the national cycling team by the age of 16.
Boardman won his first national RTTC time trial title in the 1984 "GHS" schoolboy 10-mile championship and subsequently won the 1986 junior 25-mile championship. He also broke the junior 25-mile national record in 1984.
Boardman rode a Lotus 108 in the 4 km pursuit at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona. Lotus Engineering's 'uni-axle' design incorporated several new features. Boardman caught Germany's Jens Lehmann, the 1991 World Champion, in the Olympic final.
As a senior he won four consecutive hill climb championships (from 1988 to 1991), five consecutive 25-mile championships (from 1989 to 1993), the 50-mile championship in 1991 and 1992, and the men's British time trial championship in 2000. He broke the record for 25 miles in 1992 and 1993 with 45 minutes 57 seconds (which he held until 2009) on a course based on the A34 near Oxford. He was also a member of the winning North Wirral Velo team in the 1993 100 km team time trial championship (in a record time of 2:00:07), having previously won the event three times with Manchester Wheelers' Club, in 1988, 1989 and 1991.
At the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Boardman rode a Lotus 108 in the 4 km individual pursuit. Lotus Engineering's 'uni-axle' design incorporated several new features. Boardman caught Germany's Jens Lehmann, the 1991 World Champion, in the Olympic final.
Professional career
Having started his cycling career as a time trial specialist, he turned professional with the GAN team, later renamed the Crédit Agricole team, of manager Roger Legeay. His first race as a professional was the 1993 Grand Prix Eddy Merckx, a 66 km time trial which he won. He further won several stages of the Midi Libre and Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré stage races, including the final road stage. In 1993 Boardman established the fastest time for a bicycle around the 37.73 mile Snaefell Mountain Course, the course used for the Isle of Man TT Races. Riding a specially modified bicycle, Boardman recorded a time of 1hr 23min 54secs. The time recorded would prove to be the longest standing cycling record on the Isle of Man, until it was beaten by Peter Kennaugh in 2015. Kennaugh, riding a standard racing bicycle, beat the record by six seconds.
Boardman competed with Graeme Obree for the hour record using radically modified time-trial bikes, beating each other's records in turn; in one eight-month period in 1994 the record fell four times. Boardman won fame by winning the prologue of the 1994 Tour de France with what was then the fastest time ever recorded, but lost the yellow jersey in a team time trial. He was hailed as the UK's future Tour de France winner, despite his own insistence that it was a long shot. After retirement he said he was not able to recover from the rigours of stage racing due to a low hormone profile. "I've always had it, it's probably been that way since I was born, but because of the type of racing that I did in the past, it was not a problem."
In the 1995 Tour de France, Boardman crashed at the prologue and was forced to quit. The 1996 Tour de France saw him make a timid return in the wet and rainy prologue where he was beaten by Alex Zülle and finished in second place. However, he made a comeback in the 1997 Tour de France by winning the prologue of the Tour again, although a crash forced him to quit on stage 13. Boardman won bronze in the 52 km time trial at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. He did not defend his 4 km title.
In 1998 Tour de France, when the Tour began in Dublin, Ireland, Boardman won the prologue but crashed out of the race on stage 2 while wearing the yellow jersey. In 1998 he was diagnosed with osteopenia due to low testosterone levels. Treatment to prevent worsening in this condition would have required him to take testosterone, which is banned under anti-doping rules. The UCI, in the wake of the Festina doping scandal, refused to allow Boardman an exemption on medical grounds. Faced with either retiring to allow treatment for his osteoporosis, or continuing to cycle without taking testosterone, Boardman chose to continue in cycling untreated for a further two years, hoping to finish his career on a high note at the 2000 Summer Olympics.
The Union Cycliste Internationale finally modified the regulations, mandating use of a traditional racing bicycle, similar to the one used by Eddy Merckx to establish the Hour Record in the 1970s. Boardman made his attempt at the Hour Record using this new ruling and succeeded in 2000 riding 49.441 km, just 10 m further than Merckx's 28-year-old record.
Boardman's preparation for the time trial at the 2000 Olympics was affected by missing the 2000 Tour de France due to sinus problems. Boardman came eleventh in the time trial.
Boardman retired after the Olympics, at the age of 32. In an interview Boardman admitted that the last two years of his professional career were the most difficult, especially because of his debilitating condition and marital issues. Boardman was diagnosed with osteoporosis by the time he was 30, a condition which is uncommon for someone as young as he was. He was criticised for not realising his potential, but in response he said that, "I never considered myself particularly gifted, but I managed to stretch and mould the ability that I have, and found a niche for myself."
Personal life
Boardman lives with his wife and six children in his native Wirral. Since retirement from professional cycling he has presented for ITV's cycling coverage and currently has a brand of cycles and accessories under the name Boardman Bikes. He is also involved in producing competition cycles through Boardman Elite.
Boardman was appointed a technical adviser to the British road and track cycling team in 2004, and was equipment and technical manager to the TeamGB cyclists at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.
In 2009 Boardman took part in the London marathon, finishing in 3hrs 19min 27sec. He was also inducted into the British Cycling Hall of Fame.
In 2012 Boardman commentated alongside Hugh Porter for the BBC on the cycling at the 2012 Summer Olympics, and is a contributor to cycling programmes on both BBC and ITV.
Boardman appeared on the BBC Top Gear TV show in Series 21, Episode 5 (2 March 2014) in his role as a British Cycling policy advisor in the "Make a commercial for reducing cycle-related accidents" feature.
He is an advocate of policies to greatly increase utility cycling in the United Kingdom, citing the potential to reduce the 35,000 annual deaths from obesity-related diseases, and urging that in road traffic accidents there be a presumption of guilt on the driver of the larger vehicle. In July 2016, his mother Carol died as a result of a collision with a Mitsubishi L200 pickup truck while cycling in Connah's Quay.
Career achievements
Major results
Source:
- 1986
- 3rd Team pursuit, Commonwealth Games
- 1988
- 1st National Hill Climb Championship
- 1989
- 1st National Hill Climb Championship
- 1st Individual pursuit, National Amateur Track Championships
- 1990
- 1st National Hill Climb Championship
- Commonwealth Games
- 3rd Team pursuit
- 3rd Team time trial
- 1991
- 1st National Hill Climb Championship
- 1st Individual pursuit, National Amateur Track Championships
- 1992
- 1st Individual pursuit, Olympic Games
- 1st Individual pursuit, National Amateur Track Championships
- 1993
- 1st Chrono des Nations
- 1st Duo Normand (with Laurent Bezault)
- 1st Grand Prix Eddy Merckx
- 3rd Individual pursuit, Track World Championships
- 4th Grand Prix des Nations
- 1994
- 1st Individual pursuit, Track World Championships
- 1st Time trial, Road World Championships
- Tour de France
- 1st Prologue
- Held after Prologue–Stage 1
- 1st Prologue & Stages 3 & 7 Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré
- 1st Stage 6 Tour de Suisse
- 1st Stages 1 & 6 Vuelta Ciclista a Murcia
- 3rd GP Karlsruhe (with Pascal Lance)
- 1995
- 1st Stage 4 Four Days of Dunkirk
- 1st Stage 6 Grand Prix du Midi Libre
- 2nd Overall Critérium du Dauphiné Liberé
- 1st Prologue
- 2nd Overall Tour de Picardie
- 1st Stage 3b
- 1996
- 1st Chrono des Nations
- 1st Duo Normand (with Paul Manning)
- 1st Grand Prix Eddy Merckx
- 1st Individual pursuit, Track World Championships
- 1st Grand Prix des Nations
- 1st LuK Challenge Chrono (with Uwe Peschel)
- 1st Overall Critérium International
- 1st Stage 3 Four Days of Dunkirk
- 1st Stage 2 Route du Sud
- 2nd Time trial, Road World Championships
- 3rd Overall Paris–Nice
- 1st Stage 8b
- 3rd Overall Tour de Picardie
- 3rd Time trial, Olympic Games
- 4th Grand Prix du Midi Libre
- 5th Overall Critérium du Dauphiné Liberé
- 1st Prologue
- 7th Overall Tour Méditerranéen
- 1997
- 1st Prologue Volta a Catalunya
- 1st Prologue Critérium du Dauphiné Liberé
- Tour de France
- 1st Prologue
- Held after Prologue–Stage 2
- 1st Stage 5b Vuelta a la Comunitat Valenciana
- 2nd Overall Tour de Romandie
- 1st Prologue & Stage 6
- 3rd Time trial, Road World Championships
- 3rd Grand Prix des Nations
- 5th Overall Tour of the Basque Country
- 1998
- 1st Prologue & Stage 5 Volta a Catalunya
- 1st Prologue & Stage 4 Critérium du Dauphiné Liberé
- Tour de France
- 1st Prologue
- Held after Prologue–Stage 1
- 2nd Overall Prutour
- 1st Prologue & Stage 1
- 4th Grand Prix Eddy Merckx
- 8th Chrono des Nations
- 1999
- 1st Prologue Paris–Nice
- 1st Stage 3 Critérium International
- 1st Stage 2b Prutour
- 1st GP Karlsruhe (with Jens Voigt)
- 1st Duo Normand (with Jens Voigt)
- 1st LuK Challenge Chrono (with Jens Voigt)
- 2nd Grand Prix des Nations
- 3rd Time trial, Road World Championships
- 3rd Grand Prix Eddy Merckx (with Jens Voigt)
- 8th Chrono des Nations
- 2000
- 2nd Grand Prix Eddy Merckx (with Jens Voigt)
- 4th Time trial, Road World Championships
- 6th Chrono des Nations
World records
Discipline | Record | Date | Event | Velodrome | Track | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 km individual pursuit | 4:27.357 | 27 July 1992 | Olympic Games | D'Horta (Barcelona) | Open air | |
4:24.496 | 27 July 1992 | |||||
Hour record | 52.270 km | 23 July 1993 | — | Bordeaux | Indoor | |
4 km individual pursuit | 4:27.357 | 28 August 1996 | World Championships | Manchester | ||
4:24.496 | 29 August 1996 | |||||
Hour record | 56.375 km | 6 September 1996 | — | |||
49.441 km | 27 October 2000 | — |
Awards and honours
- Bidlake Memorial Prize: 1992
- Sports Journalists' Association Pat Besford Award: 1992
- Member of the Order of the British Empire: 1993
- British Cycling Hall of Fame: 2010
- "Chris Boardman (Great Britain)". The-Sports.org. Québec, Canada: Info Média Conseil. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
- "Chris Boardman". Cycling Archives. de Wielersite. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
- "Chris Boardman MBE Cycling Career CV" (PDF). Boardman Bikes. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 March 2015. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
- ^ "Men's World Records" (PDF). Union Cycliste Internationale. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 June 2015. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
- ^ Hutchinson 2010, p. 280.
- "Award Winners". The F. T. Bidlake Memorial Trust. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
- "Past winners of the SJA British Sports Awards". Sports Journalists' Association. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
- "British Cycling Hall of Fame – 2010 Inductees". British Cycling Hall of Fame. Retrieved 21 October 2015.