Paul Manning (cyclist)
Paul Manning (2019) | |
To person | |
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Date of birth | November 6, 1974 |
nation | United Kingdom |
End of career | 2008 |
Most important successes | |
Team (s) as coach | |
2009–2013 2013- |
British National Endurance Team Women British National Endurance Team Men |
Last updated: September 29, 2019 |
Paul Manning MBE (born November 6, 1974 in Stockport ) is a British cycling coach, former cyclist and Olympic champion.
Cycling career
Manning won the Duo Normand time trial on the road in 1996 . The following year he won the time trial of the Tour of Sweden . His first major success was the overall victory in the 2001 Milk Race and two months later a stage victory in the Saxony Tour . In 2002 he also won a stage in the Milk Race and a year later in the Herald Sun Tour . In 2005 Manning drove for the British Continental Team Recycling.co.uk and since 2006 he has been under contract with the Belgian Professional Continental Team Landbouwkrediet-Colnago .
Manning is more successful on the track than on the road. He won his first silver medal at the track cycling world championships in 2000 in the team pursuit. Later at the Olympic Games in Sydney , the British national team secured the bronze medal. Until the next games he was with the national team in the team pursuit three times second and once third at the world championships.
In Athens the British lost to the Australians in the final and secured the silver medal. In the first year after the Olympics, he then managed to win the world title for the first time . At the subsequent World Championships in Bordeaux , he was runner-up for the fifth time and, with his third place, got a medal in the single pursuit for the first time. At the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne he even won the gold medal in the single pursuit and a second gold in the team competition. Manning achieved these successes with Bradley Wiggins , Chris Newton , Steve Cummings , Rob Hayles , Bryan Steel and Geraint Thomas, among others .
2008 Paul Manning won at the Olympic Games in Beijing together with Ed Clancy , Bradley Wiggins and Geraint Thomas the gold medal in the team pursuit after the quartet previously world champion had become. The British four-man won both competitions with a new world record time.
Work as a trainer
After the 2008 Olympics, Manning resigned from active cycling. In 2009 he was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE). In December 2010, Manning was inducted into the British Cycling Hall of Fame .
Manning became a member of the British Cycling coaching staff and coached women in the endurance area. Under his aegis, the British women's team won the gold medal in the team pursuit at the 2012 Olympic Games in London and set a new world record six times. In 2012 he was named Trainer of the Year in Great Britain . In 2013 he took over the supervision of the male endurance riders.
successes
train
2005
- World Champion - Team Pursuit (with Rob Hayles , Steve Cummings and Chris Newton )
2006
- Commonwealth Games - Single Pursuit, Team Pursuit (with Rob Hayles , Steve Cummings, and Chris Newton )
- 2007
- World Champion - Team Pursuit (with Geraint Thomas , Bradley Wiggins and Ed Clancy )
- 2008
- Olympic Champion - Team Pursuit (with Geraint Thomas , Bradley Wiggins and Ed Clancy ) - new world record 3: 53.314 minutes
- World Champion - Team Pursuit (with Geraint Thomas , Bradley Wiggins and Ed Clancy ) - new world record 3: 56.322 minutes
Street
- 1996
- 2001
- Milk Race
- a stage Saxony tour
- 2003
- one stage Herald Sun Tour
- 2007
- one stage Tour of Britain
Teams
- 2005 Recycling.co.uk-MG-Xpower-Litespeed
- 2006 Landbouwkrediet-Colnago
- 2007 Landbouwkrediet-Tönissteiner
Web links
- Paul Manning in the Radsportseiten.net database
- Paul Manning (cyclist) in the ProCyclingStats.com database
- Paul Manning in the Sports-Reference database (English; archived from the original )
Individual evidence
- ^ Paul Manning: I've got a gold medal but I don't have a job. Daily Mirror, September 1, 2008, accessed December 24, 2013 .
- ↑ oT. The London Gazette , December 31, 2008, accessed December 24, 2013 .
- ↑ Minichiello Named UK Coach of the Year. sportscoachuk.org, accessed December 24, 2013 .
- ^ Nigel Wynn: Paul Manning appointed as British men's endurance coach. In: Cycling Weekly. May 3, 2013, accessed September 29, 2019 .
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Manning, Paul |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | British cyclist |
DATE OF BIRTH | November 6, 1974 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Stockport |