Laura Kenny has thanked former Great Britain Cycling Team technical director Shane Sutton for helping make her the country’s most successful female Olympian – but says she “can’t condone” the discriminatory comments he is accused of making, an accusation that a British Cycling investigation upheld against the Australian.
Sutton, who was last week revealed to be on Cycling Australia’s shortlist for the vacant position of high performance director, denies the allegations made against him in April by track sprinter Jess Varnish, and plans to appeal the decision.
> Sutton to appeal British Cycling verdict
The 59-year-old resigned after further claims of discrimination were made against him by para-cyclist Darren Kenny, but several Rio gold medallists have credited him with laying the foundations for Team GB’s dominance of the track events at a third successive Olympic Games.
Four-time Olympic champion Kenny, speaking ahead of her appearance at the weekend’s Revolution Champions League in London, told Reuters: "Shane never said anything wrong to me personally, he never was out of line.
"But to know that it went on in my workplace upsets me because I wouldn't have wanted to have been treated like that and I don't want to see other people treated like that."
"He would go out of his way to help me and treated me very well but I can't condone what the investigation proved," she went on.
Team GB won six of the 10 track gold medals on offer at Rio. Kenny, who helped Team GB defend the team pursuit title and also retained the Omnium, had a hand in two of those while her husband Jason won gold in the team and individual sprints and the keirin.
"It wasn't like we had daily contact with Shane," she added. "Obviously Shane and Dave B put the system in place and that is a lot of the reason behind our success.
"But it proved that the system is in place because when he did leave we went and won six golds in Rio.”
The country is already looking to Tokyo 2020 and beyond, and Kenny said: "Now we know that the girls and guys are coming through the academy. They proved they are ready to step up. At the Glasgow World Cup they pretty much won every event they were in.”
Kenny has yet to decide whether she will race in the UCI Track World Championships in Hong Kong in April, the first step on the road to Tokyo 2020.
In October, the UCI overhauled the omnium format, which will now comprise four events over a single day rather than six over two days, with timed events – the time trial, flying lap and individual pursuit – all disappearing.
> UCI cuts Omnium from 6 events to 4 as part of track cycling reforms
The elimination race – perhaps Kenny’s forte – scratch race and points race all remain, and are joined by a new event, the tempo race, as the emphasis of the programme moves firmly to endurance.
Kenny is on the shortlist for this month’s BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award, as is her husband, and is one of the favourites to make the final three, although tennis star Andy Murray remains the red-hot favourite to win the trophy for an unprecedented third time.
> Cyclists dominate BBC Sports Personality of the Year shortlist
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2 comments
What a shame. Laura Kenny says she never experienced anything like that. Shane Sutton says the accusation is false and he is appealing it. And yet she is prepared to weigh in as if these accusations are proven. I have to say that I hope she doesn't have to rely on colleagues to stand by her one day while she has to battle against what she says are unfounded accusations. To find them instead on social media making comments as if the accusations were a proven fact.
You can always just tell the truth even when asked. " I never saw or experienced anything like that." was sufficient for the moment.
Laura Kenny, isn't she married to Jason Trott?