Julian Winn
Welsh cyclist
Personal information | |
---|---|
Full name | Julian Winn |
Born | (1972-09-23) 23 September 1972 (age 51) Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales |
Team information | |
Current team | Endura Racing |
Discipline | Road, Track, Cyclo cross |
Role | Rider and Coach |
Professional teams | |
1999 | Linda McCartney Racing Team |
2000–2002 | Elite 2/3 |
2003 | Team fakta-Pata |
2005 | Assos Racing Team |
2005–2006 | Pinarello Racing Team |
Major wins | |
British National Road Race Champion 2002 | |
Julian Winn from Abergavenny, Wales (born 23 September 1972[1]) is a former Welsh competitive cyclist who was formerly directeur sportif at the UCI Continental cycling team Endura Racing.[2] He represented Wales in the 1998 Commonwealth Games at Kuala Lumpur and at the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester. He was appointed Welsh Cycling coach in 2005. In 2008, he was GB road race team manager at the Beijing Olympics, overseeing the victory of Welsh compatriot Nicole Cooke. Since the folding of Team Endura Winn has been director of Sugar Loaf Road, which organises bike riding weekends in the Black Mountains.[2][3]
Results
Cyclo Cross
- 2005
- 1st, Welsh Cyclo Cross Championships
- 2006
- 1st, Welsh Cyclo Cross Championships
- 2007
- 1st, Welsh Cyclo Cross Championships
Road
- 1998 PDM Sports WCU Team
- 1st, King of the Mountains Tour of Lancs
- 1st, King of the Mountains Tour of Morocco
- 1st, Stage 4 Prutour Chester – Nottingham 153.69 km[4]
- 1st, Welsh National Road Championships
- 4th, King of the Mountains, Prutour
- 1999
- 3rd, Archer Grand Prix
- 2000
- 1st King of the Mountains, Commonwealth Bank Classic, Australia
- 3rd, Premier Calendar Series Overall GC
- 2002
- 1st, United Kingdom National Road Race Championships
- 1st, King of the Mountains, 2005 Tour of Britain
- 3rd, Premier Calendar Series Overall GC
Track
- 1999
- 1st, 4000m Team Pursuit National Track Championships
References
- Race results on britishcycling.org.uk
- ^ 2002 Commonwealth Games profile
- ^ a b "Julian Winn". LinkedIn. Archived from the original on 15 September 2013. Retrieved 15 September 2013.
- ^ "Sugar Loaf Road". Archived from the original on 15 September 2013. Retrieved 15 September 2013.
- ^ "Tour of Britain - Prutour 1998 - Stage 4 (Chester to Nottingham) - YouTube". YouTube.
- v
- t
- e
- Jack Holmes (1938)
- Jack Fancourt (1939)
- Reg Braddick (1944)
- J. A. O'Driscoll (1945)
- Ernie Clements (1946)
- Alex Taylor (1947)
- Bob Maitland (1948)
- A D Newman (1949)
- Gordon Thomas (1950)
- Peter Procter (1951)
- Graham Vines (1952)
- Ted Gerrard (1953)
- B J Sandy (1954)
- Bernard King (1955)
- Alan Jackson (1956)
- Ron Coe (1957 Independent)
- Stan Brittain (1957 Amateur)
- Bill Seggar (1958)
- Ernie Clements (1943)
- Percy Stallard (1944)
- Ernie Clements (1945)
- George Edwards (1946)
- E I Upton (1947)
- R C Ashwin (1948)
- Dave Bedwell (1949)
- Ralph Parkin (1950)
- Charlie Bland (1951)
- Mike Howarth (1952)
- Derek Evans (1953)
- Reg Browne (1954)
- Des Robinson (1955)
- Mike England (1956)
- Charlie Mather (1957)
- Bill Baty (1958)
(1946–1958)
- A H Clarke (1946)
- Dennis Jaggard (1947)
- Harold Johnson (1948)
- Bob Thom (1949)
- Leonard West (1950)
- Dave Bedwell (1951)
- Ian Steel (1952)
- Bob Maitland (1953)
- Arthur Ilsley (1954)
- Graham Vines (1955)
- not held in 1956
- Ron Coe (1958–1957)
(1959–1995)
- Bill Baty (1959)
- Bill Bradley (1960–(1961)
- Keith Butler (1962)
- Bob Addy (1963)
- Pete Gordon (1964)
- Les West (1965)
- Arthur Metcalfe (1966)
- Les West (1967)
- Pete Matthews (1968)
- Brian Jolly (1969)
- Dave Rollinson (1970–1971)
- Doug Dailey (1972)
- Grant Thomas (1973)
- William Nickson (1974)
- Kevin Apter (1975)
- Doug Dailey (1976)
- Steve Lawrence (1977)
- Robert Millar (1978–1979)
- Steve Lawrence (1980)
- Mark Bell (1981)
- Jeff Williams (1982)
- John Cavanagh (1983)
- Neil Martin (1984)
- Paul Watson (1985)
- Deno Davie (1986)
- Paul Curran (1987)
- Neil Hoban (1988)
- David Cook (1989)
- Simeon Hempsall (1990)
- John Hughes (1991)
- Simon Bray (1992)
- Rob Harris (1993–1994)
- Simon Bray (1995)
(1959–1995)
- Ron Coe (1959)
- race was not held in 1960
- Dave Bedwell (1961)
- John Harvey (1962)
- Albert Hitchen (1963)
- Keith Butler (1964)
- Albert Hitchen (1965)
- Dick Goodman (1966)
- Colin Lewis (1967–1968)
- Bill Lawrie (1969)
- Les West (1970)
- Danny Horton (1971)
- Gary Crewe (1972)
- Brian Jolly (1973)
- Keith Lambert (1974)
- Les West (1975)
- Geoff Wiles (1976)
- Phil Edwards (1977)
- Phil Corley (1978)
- Sid Barras (1979)
- Keith Lambert (1980)
- William Nickson (1981)
- John Herety (1982)
- Phil Thomas (1983)
- Steve Joughin (1984)
- Ian Banbury (1985)
- Mark Bell (1986)
- Paul Sherwen (1987)
- Steve Joughin (1988)
- Tim Harris (1989)
- Colin Sturgess (1990)
- Brian Smith (1991)
- Sean Yates (1992)
- Malcolm Elliott (1993)
- Brian Smith (1994)
- Robert Millar (1995)
- Dave Rand (1996)
- Jeremy Hunt (1997)
- Matt Stephens (1998)
- John Tanner (1999–2000)
- Jeremy Hunt (2001)
- Julian Winn (2002)
- Roger Hammond (2003–2004)
- Russell Downing (2005)
- Hamish Haynes (2006)
- David Millar (2007)
- Rob Hayles (2008)
- Kristian House (2009)
- Geraint Thomas (2010)
- Bradley Wiggins (2011)
- Ian Stannard (2012)
- Mark Cavendish (2013)
- Peter Kennaugh (2014–2015)
- Adam Blythe (2016)
- Steve Cummings (2017)
- Connor Swift (2018)
- Ben Swift (2019)
- not held in 2020
- Ben Swift (2021)
- Mark Cavendish (2022)
- Fred Wright (2023)