British Olympics icon retires for new career after heartbreaking personal tragedy

Katie Archibald, the double Olympic gold medallist, has announced her departure from professional cycling at the age of 32 to embark on a career in nursing
|GETTY

Katie Archibald is a double Olympic champion
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Katie Archibald, the double Olympic gold medallist, has announced her departure from professional cycling at the age of 32 to embark on a career in nursing.
The Scottish track cyclist, who claimed team pursuit gold at Rio 2016 and Madison gold alongside Laura Kenny at the Tokyo Games in 2021, has amassed seven world championship titles throughout her decorated career.
Despite helping Great Britain secure team pursuit victory at the European Championships in Turkey just three months ago, Archibald began her nursing training last September.
She has described herself as having "fallen completely in love" with her new vocation, which has given her the confidence to step away from elite sport.
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Archibald's path to this decision has been marked by profound personal and professional adversity.
In 2022, she was forced to withdraw from the Commonwealth Games after sustaining injuries to both ankles when a car struck her while cycling.
That same year brought devastating tragedy when she discovered her partner, Rab Wardell, suffering a fatal cardiac arrest beside her in bed. He was 37.

The Scottish track cyclist, who claimed team pursuit gold at Rio 2016 and Madison gold alongside Laura Kenny at the Tokyo Games in 2021, has amassed seven world championship titles throughout her decorated career
|GETTY
The seven-time world champion demonstrated remarkable resilience, returning to claim world titles in the team pursuit in both 2023 and 2024.
However, her hopes of competing at a third Olympics were shattered just weeks before the Paris Games when she tripped on a garden step, ruling her out of the competition.
Reflecting on her decision, Archibald said: "I've fallen completely in love with the whole thing.
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Katie Archibald began her nursing training last September
|GETTY
"I really want to stress that the nursing training isn't forcing me into retirement, [but] at the same time, this thing that I'm enamoured with is making me excited for the future, and that makes this transition less scary."
The 32-year-old completed her first clinical placement a couple of months ago.
"It feels so special being someone people can trust when they need help," she said.
"The draw of the 'real world' has been pulling me for a while, but I've been too scared to leave the world I know and love and, ultimately, to let go of something I'm good at."
She added: "Now is the right time simply because I'm not scared any more."
Archibald came to cycling relatively late, initially taking up the sport recreationally before her aptitude for endurance events became apparent. She joined British Cycling's academy in 2013 at the age of 19.
At Rio, she rode to victory in the team pursuit alongside Kenny, Jo Rowsell and Elinor Barker.
Stephen Park, British Cycling's performance director, paid tribute to the departing champion.
"Katie has described herself as 'obsessed' with the sport and her relentless drive in the pursuit of excellence, combined with a deep passion for track cycling, has led her to be one of Britain's most decorated track cyclists," he said.
Park praised her as "a leader by example" whose performances and conduct elevated those around her.










