No active professional cyclists currently call Kenya home. If a perennial Tour de France competitor and world record marathoner have any say in it, that’s about to change.
Eliud Kipchoge and Ineos Grenadiers know a thing or two about covering miles fast under human power. Before the human cycling machine known as Tadej Pogačar started punishing the field, Ineos won seven of eight Tours de France between 2012 and 2019.
Kipchoge’s reputation for speed and performance, if anything, is more superlative. He ran the fastest marathon anyone’s ever run — twice, though his second (sub-2-hour) time remains unconfirmed.
Kipchoge’s running academy in Kenya, Kaptagat, cranks out long-distance running proteges as a matter of course. So why not do the same with up-and-coming cyclists?
Ineos will help Kipchoge answer that question with the INEOS Eliud Kipchoge Cycling Academy. Its mission? To open the door for Kenyan cyclists to compete at a high level on the international stage.
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Experience Talks
Currently, no Kenyan cyclists ride on the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) professional circuit. The new Academy looks to change that.
