Book description
Fully updated to include the extraordinary scenes at London 2012, where
Hoy won two more gold medals to bring his total to six and overtake Sir
Steve Redgrave, this is the story of Britain's greatest ever Olympian.
Chris Hoy has been instrumental in British track cycling's remarkable
transformation from also-rans to world superpower. Now, having rewritten
the record books as Olympic champion in four different cycling
disciplines, and with six gold medals, Hoy has become a household
name and established himself in the pantheon of sporting greats.
This is a fly-on-the-wall account of Hoy and his team as he prepared
for the Beijing Olympics, where he became the first Briton in a century
to win three gold medals in a single Games, and it has now been fully
updated to include the extraordinary scenes at London 2012, where Hoy
won two more gold medals, to bring his total to six and overtake Sir
Steve Redgrave as Britain's greatest ever Olympian.
The story begins with Hoy's introduction to cycling as a BMX racer and
his progression to Olympic champion, and explains the origins and
evolution of Britain's world-beating team. It includes a bizarre visit
to the world's highest velodrome in Bolivia and a spellbinding journey
from the razzmatazz of the
European six-day circuit to the craziness of the Japanese keirin races.
Award-winning writer Richard Moore tracks Hoy throughout a season in
the saddle, explores his motivations and mentors from a young age, and
provides an unblemished insight into the mind of a champion and the
largely unknown world of track cycling. It's a story that is fully
updated with the remarkable events in Beijing in 2008 and London in
2012, two successive Olympic Games that were dominated by Hoy and the
British track cycling team. 'This is an absolutely must-read
book…Moore has cleverly used the very cogent words of others to paint a
picture of real characters within a new order' Graham Obree, Scotsman
'A cracking story…I couldn't put it down' Hugh Porter, BBC cycling commentator
'Like its hero, this book is the real McHoy.' Scotland on Sunday
'An excellent book'. The Sunday Times
'…an inspiring tale. And in Richard Moore it has a splendid
chronicler.' Independent on Sunday
'This is a must-read book that tells a story that had to be told.' The Scotsman
'…a gripping inside story of how Team GB's cyclists rode to glory.'
Independent on Sunday Richard Moore is a freelance journalist who has
written on sport, art and literature, contributing to the Scotsman,
Scotland on Sunday, Herald, Guardian and Sunday Times. He was a member
of the Scotland team in the Prutour, the nine-day cycling tour of
Britain, and represented Scotland in the 1998 Commonwealth Games. His
first book for HarperSport, In Search of Robert Millar, won Best
Biography at the 2007 British Sports Book Awards.