Alex Edmondson, elite Australian cyclist

The Story of a Champion

About
Alex

Fourteen years. Two Olympics. Multiple world titles. One relentless pursuit of excellence.

Australia's
Complete Cyclist

Alex Edmondson is one of the most decorated Australian cyclists of his generation. Equally at home on the velodrome and the open road, he built a career that spanned 14 years at the sport's very highest level, competing against and alongside the world's best.

From his early days on the track, where he first captured the attention of Australian cycling, through to his final kilometers in the peloton for Team Picnic–PostNL, Alex brought the same fierce competitive drive to every race he entered.

He retired as an Olympic silver medalist, multiple UCI World Champion, and Australian national road race champion. A rare few athletes achieve distinction in a single discipline. Alex achieved it in two.

Cyclist training on the velodrome track

A Decade and a Half
at the Top

  1. London Olympics

    Historic London Debut

    Alex represented Australia at the 2012 London Olympic Games, making history alongside his sister Annette Edmondson. The two became the first brother-and-sister duo to represent Australia in cycling at the same Olympic Games, a landmark moment in Australian sporting history that captured the nation's imagination.

  2. World Championships

    Rainbow Jerseys

    Alex claimed multiple UCI World Championship titles on the track, including the prestigious individual pursuit title. Wearing the rainbow jersey is the highest honour in competitive cycling. Alex wore it more than once, establishing himself as one of the world's elite pursuers and a dominant force in the velodrome.

  3. Rio Olympic Games

    Olympic Silver Medal

    At the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games, Alex and the Australian team pursuit squad delivered a silver medal performance that stood as the pinnacle of his track career. Competing on the world's biggest sporting stage, he showed the composure and power that defined him as a champion cyclist.

  4. Road Cycling

    National Champion on the Road

    Transitioning from the velodrome to the professional road circuit, Alex proved his versatility by clinching the Australian national road race title. He went on to race for top-tier UCI WorldTour teams across Europe, competing in the sport's greatest stage races and classics against the world's finest road professionals.

  5. Team Picnic–PostNL

    A Career Completed

    Alex finished out his professional career with Team Picnic–PostNL, bringing the same intensity and commitment to every kilometer that had defined him since his earliest days in the sport. After 14 years at the elite level, he announced his retirement, leaving behind a legacy that stretches across two Olympic Games and two disciplines.

Siblings celebrating at the Olympic Games

The first brother and sister to represent Australia in cycling at the same Olympic Games.

When Alex and his sister Annette Edmondson both lined up at the 2012 London Games, they made Australian sporting history. Both had reached the top of their sport through talent, sacrifice, and shared determination. Their family story is one of cycling's most remarkable, and a reminder that excellence can run deep in those who commit everything to their craft.

The Record
Speaks

Olympic Silver Medal

Team Pursuit, 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games

Multiple World Titles

UCI World Championships, Individual Pursuit and team events

National Road Champion

Australian National Road Race Championship title

UCI WorldTour Professional

Competed for elite WorldTour teams across Europe and the globe

Two Olympic Games

Represented Australia at London 2012 and Rio de Janeiro 2016

Historic Family First

First brother-sister duo to represent Australia in cycling at the same Olympics

Professional road cyclists competing in a UCI WorldTour race

Racing
Europe's Best

The step from track to road is one of cycling's great transitions. Alex made it look natural. Racing alongside some of the world's most celebrated climbers, sprinters, and all-rounders, he competed at the front end of the sport's most prestigious events.

His WorldTour career saw him line up in Europe's great stage races and classics, bringing the power and discipline forged on the velodrome to the open road. He retired having left nothing on the table.

Track. Road.
Champion.

An Olympic medalist and world champion across two disciplines. Alex Edmondson's career stands as one of the finest in Australian cycling history.

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