Skip to content

Sir Bradley Wiggins and Mark Cavendish set for Six Day London

RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL - AUGUST 04:  Sir Bradley Wiggins of Great Britain and Team GB leads team mate Mark Cavendish as they warm up during training at the
Image: Sir Bradley Wiggins (left) and Mark Cavendish (right) will race together at the Six Day London

Sir Bradley Wiggins will begin his two-part farewell to cycling on Tuesday when he competes alongside Mark Cavendish on the opening night of the Six Day London.

Wiggins, 36, has already concluded his road career but will race twice more on the track over the next month before retiring.

Both events will be six-day races, the first in London from October 25-30 and the second in the Belgian city of Ghent from November 15-20.

Sir Bradley Wiggins, Mark Cavendish, UCI Track Cycling World Championships, Madison
Image: Wiggins and Cavendish are reigning world Madison champions

Six-day races are contested in a festival atmosphere by teams of two across a range of disciplines, with the winners being the pair with the highest cumulative points total.

The event was born in Britain in the late-19th century but died off on these shores in 1980 and was only resurrected last year, when the Madison Sports Group held the new Six Day London for the first time.

London Six Day 2015
Image: The Six Day London was resurrected last year

While six-day racing suffered a slump in Britain, it has always thrived in Belgium, in particular, and the most famous event is the Six Days of Ghent, held at the raucous and iconic Kuipke velodrome.

The stadium and event are steeped in cycling history, with some of the sport's greatest names having raced and won there, and it is where Ghent-born Wiggins wants to compete for the final time.

Also See:

However, his farewell is unlikely to be as romantic as he would have hoped given the controversy currently surrounding his use of the allergy drug triamcinolone under therapeutic use exemptions ahead of the 2011 and 2012 Tours de France and the 2013 Giro d'Italia.

Sir Bradley Wiggins, Olympic Games, Rio 2016
Image: Wiggins will race for the final time in Britain this week

There are also still unanswered questions over a medical package delivered to Team Sky in June 2011, but it is understood that Wiggins will not talk to the media during the London event.

Cavendish is likely to be less guarded. The 31-year-old Manxman won the world Madison title with Wiggins earlier this year and will partner him in both London and Ghent.

Watch NOW TV
Watch NOW TV

Watch Sky Sports for just £6.99. No contract.

He finished runner-up alongside Belgium's Iljo Keisse at the 2014 Six Days of Ghent and is keen to go one better this year.

Speaking at the Abu Dhabi Tour, where he was racing last week, Cavendish said: "It's going to be hard. Ghent is known as crazy-hard. The demands on riders is a lot. Kuipke is a stadium that is steeped in history and a lot of great riders have ridden there.

"To be riding this year with Brad, as [Madison] world champions, is pretty special. It's back to [Eddy] Merckx and [Patrick] Sercu days.

London Six Day 2015
Image: Six-day racing takes place in a festival atmosphere and is contested by teams of two

"There are always a lot of British spectators there and I love to race in Belgium and it's always a good atmosphere. I got close with Iljo Keisse a couple of years ago and I would like to try and win it this year."

The Six Day London will this year be the first event of the Europe-wide Six Day Series. Subsequent events will be held in Amsterdam, Berlin and Copenhagen, before a grand final in Mallorca in the spring.

Six-day races are made up of the Madison, 500m time trial, team elimination race, 250m team time trial, longest lap, the derny race and the team 'win and out' race.

You can watch Premier League and EFL Cup football, plus England's tour of Bangladesh and the Mexican Grand Prix on Sky Sports. Upgrade now and enjoy six months at half price.

Around Sky