The British Cycling Federation (BCF) was formed in 1959 at the end of an administrative dispute within the sport. The governing body since 1878 had been the
National Cyclists Union (NCU). The legality of cyclists on the road had not been established and the NCU worried that all cycling could be affected by police concerns about racing. The race organiser and writer,
Chas Messenger, said: "Thousands of cyclists were convicted or fined for dangerous riding, many on mere suspicion and unsupported evidence." The NCU banned all racing on the road and insisted clubs use
velodromes. The NCU suspended Stallard and others and they formed the
British League of Racing Cyclists (BLRC). It and the NCU fought each other until they merged in 1959.
The British Cycling Federation The merged organisation became the British Cycling Federation. It accepted racing on the open road and finally to the velodrome in
Manchester. The British Cycling Federation was renamed simply British Cycling after it merged with the British Cyclo-Cross Association, the British Mountain Bike Federation, the English BMX Association and the British Cycle Speedway Council. Each is now a commission within the BCF. In 1996, the BCF incurred large debts as a result of a legal dispute with
Tony Doyle, who resigned from his position as President of the Federation shortly after its Board attempted to remove him. Doyle had been elected to the Presidency in late 1995 on a platform of increasing transparency and accountability in the Federation: the campaign to remove him was based on claims that he had failed to declare his role as a consultant to a company that wanted to act as the promoter for the
1996 UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Manchester. In December 1996, the report of auditors from the UK Sports Council into the Federation's finances and management found that there were serious shortcomings in its procedures for accounting and control of finances and potential conflicts of interests between board members and leading companies in the cycling sector. The board were then removed by the membership and replaced with an emergency management committee. As a result of the report,
Minister for Sport Iain Sproat warned that the BCF's Sports Council grants could be withdrawn and that it could be banned from applying for Lottery money.
Brian Cookson was elected as president soon afterwards: he described the organisation's situation at the time as "close to bankruptcy, 14,000 members and falling, one Olympic gold in 76 years and not much else to show. It was pretty dire".
International dominance In December 1997, British Cycling appointed
Peter Keen as its Performance Director, with initial responsibility for £900,000 of funding granted by the
UK Sports Council on the basis of a one-year interim World Class Performance Plan. He was chosen ahead of
Steve Paulding and
Paul Sherwen. Keen immediately outlined the focus of the Plan, emphasising that it would mainly be aimed at targeting track cycling due to the large number of Olympic medals on offer. He spent much of the next year developing an eight-year plan to secure longer-term funding: in January 1999 it was announced that British Cycling had secured lottery funding for six years, with an award of £2.5 million for the first year. The first fruits of the programme were harvested at the
2000 Summer Olympics: on the track, Team GB took two bronzes, a silver and a gold medal, the latter of which was taken by
Jason Queally in the
1 km time trial. Following the Games, Keen started speaking publicly about what Britain needed to do to become the world number one nation in track cycling. The team backed up their Olympic success at the subsequent
2000 UCI Track Cycling World Championships on home ground in Manchester by winning five medals, including a first world title for
Yvonne McGregor in the individual pursuit. After a disappointing performance at the
2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester, the squad bounced back at the
Track World Championships, where they finished second in the medal table with three gold medals. That year also saw the appointment of
Shane Sutton in Manchester, having previously been Welsh national coach. The academy used a training base in
Tuscany from 2006 to 2010, and has since returned to Italy, basing itself in
Montichiari since 2016. Other notable riders who participated in the academy programme include Kennaugh,
Geraint Thomas,
Ian Stannard,
Ben Swift and
Simon Yates. That year Keen left his role, whilst continuing to work with British Cycling in a consultancy capacity until the
2004 Summer Olympics: Brailsford was appointed as his replacement. Following the 2024 Olympics it was announced that British-born track cyclist
Matthew Richardson, who won three medals whilst representing Australia during the 2024 Olympics would be switching allegiance to the country of his birth and would represent Great Britain in international competition from September 2024 onwards. Richardson won 10 medals in international competition whilst representing his previous country including 3 Olympic medals, 5 World Championship medals (including one gold) and two Commonwealth medals (both of which were gold medals). This announcement drew a frosty response from
AusCycling (the cycling governing body of Australia) to the point they confirmed to Australian media that they were actively considering enforcing for a two-year 'non-competition order' on Richardson which would stop Richardson from competing in international competitions for Great Britain until 2026. ==Organisation==