Daily Express

Kenny won’t pedal for the medals now

RETIRING JASON TO COACH GB

- By Mike Walters

KNIGHT rider Sir Jason Kenny conceded he was a “little bit sad” to abdicate as king of Team GB’s blazing saddles.

But as the seven-time Olympic champion announces his retirement from racing today, to take up a job as British Cycling’s elite sprint coach, he admitted the chance to become the next generation’s guru was too good to pass up.

Kenny, 33, rides into the sunset as Britain’s greatest Olympian.

His stunning keirin gold in Japan six months ago was not just a fabulous way to roll the credits. It was pure Hollywood.

But after consulting his wife Dame Laura Kenny – the five-time Olympic champion who could yet overtake him to become the most decorated cyclist in their household – the Bolton Bullet yielded to Father Time.

Although he planned to compete until the Paris 2024 Games, Kenny’s outlook changed when British Cycling advertised for a new podium sprint coach on LinkedIn and he submitted a speculativ­e applicatio­n.

Top brass at the ‘medal factory’ in Manchester could not believe their luck that the man who raised standards to unpreceden­ted levels now wanted to be in charge.

Kenny said: “It wasn’t an easy decision. I genuinely wanted to carry on to Paris, but I creak quite a lot these days and I always knew I wanted to go into coaching off the back of it. I am a little bit sad, to be honest, because all I’ve known is riding and competing, but I’m quite excited to get stuck in.

“When the job ad came up, and I ummed and aahhed a bit, I was full-time training at the time, but I’ve started to ache a lot more these days.

“I thought, I don’t even know if I’ll make it to Paris, so I could commit for three years and get nothing out of it.

“This opportunit­y might not come round again. If they got a good coach they could be in the role for potentiall­y 10 years, so I thought I’d go for it now.

“If I hadn’t got the job, I would have carried on racing in all likelihood.”

Kenny has retired before, stepping away after his hat-trick of team sprint, individual sprint and keirin titles in Rio six years ago. But he did not announce his decision – and then reversed it a year later.

This time, there will be no U-turns – and Kenny is finding the definitive end of the road much tougher to accept. He said: “In Rio I was quite happy to see the back of

it. But coming back and being refreshed makes it a lot harder to walk away.”

Kenny admits his startling breakaway to win gold in Tokyo was a thrilling way to sign off, saying: “I’m dead happy with that. To do it on that bike, the last day of the Olympics, is a really special moment in time. If I could have picked a day to end on, that would be the one.”

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 ?? ?? POWER PAIR: With Laura
POWER PAIR: With Laura

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