Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Welsh athlete Geraint Thomas.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
Geraint Howell Thomas, is a Welsh professional racing cyclist who currently rides for UCI WorldTeam Ineos Grenadiers, Wales and Great Britain. He is one of the few riders in the modern era to achieve significant elite success as both a track and road rider, with notable victories in the velodrome, in one-day racing and in stage racing. On the track, he has won three World Championships, and two Olympic gold medals, while on the road he won the 2018 Tour de France, and the 2022 Tour de Suisse, becoming the first Welshman to win either.
I've put on a helmet more times than I've buckled a seatbelt.
Winning that team-pursuit Olympic gold medal was unbelievable.
It's hard to put into words, really, how proud I am and great it is to represent Wales because, in cycling, it's a little-known country, so it's nice to put it on the map.
Everyone in the world of cycling knows how much it is a team sport as well as individual. It's just amazing to be a part of.
Life's not fair, I guess.
I used to run home from school to watch Paris-Nice, so to win it is just crazy.
Of course you want a better culture of cycling in the U.K. Better roads. More respect.
I'm a big fan of Anthony Joshua.
I like riding for five or six hours, then sitting on the sofa staring at the TV. It's my normal.
When you're eating salad and quinoa while training, all you want is a burger. In the cycling season, when I'm doing 30-odd hours of exercise a week, I'm dreaming of burgers and curries that I'll have at the end of the season.
I get moody when I'm tired or hungry. My missus says I get moody... but not with other people. But I can get grumpy.
My wife, she puts up with a lot: we're training hard, you're tired, you're not eating a lot, so you get a bit grumpy, so she does put up with a lot - fair play.
The last thing I want to do, even in the off-season, is traipse around shops looking for clothes: it's not my thing.
In a stage race, you can have bad luck or make a mistake, and it's not the end of the race. You have more opportunities.
I rode for Maindy Flyers, a local kids' club from Cardiff. We started travelling across the country doing races, but Manchester was the first stage race I did.
I never thought I would grow up writing a book.
You will have ups and downs - but believe anything is possible. With hard work, it can come off.
I am not really superstitious - I get ready in the same order pretty much every day. I'm afraid I'm a bit boring like that.
Just dream big. Go for it. There's nothing holding you back. You can have ups and downs, but if you believe in something, keep the faith; keep fighting. And don't let people put you down.
I don't mind it when people come up to me and say, 'Well done.' That's lovely. The bit that's weird is stuff like... I've had a load of eBay people hounding me. Just sort of getting you to sign stuff which they can then sell.
I want to do marathons; I want to do an Ironman.
I just love riding my bike - no more so than at home in Cardiff and in South Wales on the roads where I started out, riding with my mates who I grew up with.
I have come to see what the Tour is about, and it has been harder than I imagined. You don't realise what it is like until you actually compete.
In Britain, we have this attitude that people are one-hit wonders. If it proves that way, I'd rather have had that one hit than not at all.
Brits love an underdog, don't they?
I've won the Tour. But no, I don't feel I'm a celebrity.
I miss the BBC when I'm away. I'm away so much that it's a pleasure just walking back through the door and sitting on the sofa to watch some rubbish TV.
You get into such a routine of trying so hard each day and racing between 180 and 220 km., and as soon as you stop, it's weird, but you start to seize up. So it's easier if you keep the body ticking over. You just feel better for it come race day.
I had a normal, nice upbringing in Cardiff.
I was fortunate to be born when I was. There's been a massive rise in British cycling since I joined the junior programme when I was 17. It all started in 2004 when Chris Hoy won gold for the 1 km. time trial in Athens; when one person starts doing well, they take everyone with them.
I regret not paying a bit more attention to Welsh lessons at school. My Welsh is pretty ropey, as back at my school, people didn't take Welsh lessons seriously. My dad can speak it, so I wish he'd taught me some growing up.