Sir David John Brailsford CBE (born 29 February 1964)[1] is a British cycling coach and specialist sports director. He was formerly performance director of British Cycling and is currently team principal of UCI WorldTeam Ineos Grenadiers.[2] He is currently working with French football club Nice and British football club Manchester United as part of his role as Director of Sport at Ineos.[3][4]

Quick Facts Personal information, Full name ...
Sir
David Brailsford
CBE
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Brailsford in 2007
Personal information
Full nameDavid John Brailsford
Born (1964-02-29) 29 February 1964 (age 60)
Shardlow, Derbyshire, England
Team information
Current teamIneos Grenadiers
DisciplineRoad and track cycling
RoleGeneral manager
Managerial teams
1997–2014British Cycling
2010–Team Sky
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Early life

Brailsford was born in Shardlow, Derbyshire, and moved as a toddler with his parents and siblings to Deiniolen, near Caernarfon in Wales:

We were one of the few English families in that area of north Wales – we'd moved there from Derby when I was two – and somehow I always felt I didn't quite fit in. So I always thought I must try harder than the others to be accepted, to be successful.[5]

He attended Ysgol Deiniolen and Ysgol Brynrefail, and learned Welsh.[6][7] In 1984 he gave up his job as an apprentice draughtsman with the local highways department to travel to France, where he raced for four years as a sponsored amateur for a team based in Saint-Étienne. He has described his years in France as a time of learning:

I'd always hated school but now I had so much time on my hands and didn't go out much in the evenings, I became an avid reader. Training manuals, books about physiology, sports psychology. I became fluent in French too.[5]

He returned in 1988 to study for a degree in Sport and Exercise Sciences and Psychology at Chester College of Higher Education and then an MBA at Sheffield Hallam University.[8][9][10]

Career

Early career

Brailsford spent some of his early career working as an export sales manager at Planet X Bikes.[11] He was first employed by British Cycling as a consultant in 1998, after Lottery funding began the previous year.[8][12] Brailsford became programmes director before becoming performance director in 2003 following the departure of Peter Keen.[8]

'Marginal gains' philosophy

At British Cycling, Brailsford was noted for the concept of 'marginal gains':

The whole principle came from the idea that if you broke down everything you could think of that goes into riding a bike, and then improved it by 1%, you will get a significant increase when you put them all together.[13]

Brailsford's approach involved the constant measuring and monitoring of key statistics such as cyclists' power output, and training interventions targeting specific weaknesses, for example the relative weakness of Bradley Wiggins in mountain racing.[14] As well as looking at traditional components of success such as physical fitness and tactics, it also entailed a more holistic strategy, embracing technological developments, athlete psychology, and everyday life:

Do you really know how to clean your hands? Without leaving the bits between your fingers? If you do things like that properly, you will get ill a little bit less. They're tiny things but if you clump them together it makes a big difference.[13]

Peaking in the mid-2010s at the height of Brailsford's reputation, 'marginal gains' philosophy was discussed beyond cycling in the UK mainstream media.[15] Brailsford's '1% Factor' was also discussed in business circles in the UK and internationally.[16][17] In UK education policy, the Social Mobility Commission argued in 2014 that improvements in the academic performance of disadvantaged students in British schools could be compared to "the success of [the] British cycling team: the aggregation of marginal gains".[18] Writing on the 2016 EU referendum, the political commentator Tim Shipman cited "the philosophy of the Team Sky cycling team" in making the argument that "tiny improvements" made by the Remain campaign could have changed the referendum's result.[19]

Latterly, the philosophy has been criticised and ridiculed, including by Wiggins.[20][21]

Great Britain cycling team

At the 2004 Olympic Games Great Britain won two cycling gold medals, their best performance since 1908.[22] Under Brailsford's leadership, the cycling team continued to improve, winning multiple world championships in road, track, BMX and mountain bike racing. Great Britain led the cycling medal table at the 2008 and 2012 Olympic Games, winning eight golds at both, while British cyclists won 59 World Championships across different disciplines from 2003 to 2013.[23]

In reference to the success, Brailsford noted: "The whole principle came from the idea that if you broke down everything you could think of that goes into riding a bike, and then improved it by 1%, you will get a significant increase when you put them all together."[24]

Team Sky/Team Ineos

In 2010, Brailsford also became the manager of the new British-based professional team, Team Sky.[25] In this role he oversaw Bradley Wiggins', Chris Froome's and Geraint Thomas' victories in the 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 Tour de France.[26][27] In April 2014, Brailsford resigned as performance director at British Cycling to concentrate on his Team Sky responsibilities.[12]

Team Sky became Team Ineos in May 2019, due to a change of sponsor. Brailsford remained as team principal after the changeover.[28]

In December 2021, Brailsford was appointed Director of Sport at Ineos, overseeing a growing range of teams and disciplines sponsored by the group, including French football club Nice.[3] His role as Team Principal at INEOS Grenadiers cycling team continued unaffected.[29]

Doping controversy

In March 2018 the Commons Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee published the report Combatting Doping in Sport. Chapter 2 of the report, "British Cycling and Team Sky", focused on Therapeutic Use Exemptions (TUEs) gained by both organisations for the use of drugs on the WADA Prohibited List, citing the defence used by Wiggins and Shane Sutton that TUEs were used to "find gains" and put oneself "back on a level playing field" with rivals. The report alleged in particular that the drug triamcinolone had been "used to prepare" Wiggins "and possibly other riders supporting him" for the 2012 Tour de France, "not to treat medical need, but to improve his power to weight ratio ahead of the race". It concluded that Team Sky had crossed an "ethical line" by exploiting this loophole "to enhance the performance of riders".[30]

Following the publication of the report, Brailsford was defended by Chris Froome.[31]

Honours

References

Further reading

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