Monday, May 13, 2024

Felix English – Scratch Race Winner at the Glasgow Track World Cup

"Refreshingly, there was no strategy!"

-

HomeInterviewsFelix English - Scratch Race Winner at the Glasgow Track World Cup

Felix English gets embarrassed by the memory but he is one of the few men to beat Chris Hoy in a match Sprint -back in 2010, in the 1/16th finals of the European Track Championships. 

He was also a UK ‘Crit King’ with the Condor and Madison Genesis teams; winning in places like Otley, Aberystwyth and Beverley – and taking a fourth place in my home town of Kirkcaldy in Fife, Scotland. 

English also has a 2017 World Cup Madison win to his name with Mark Downey, in Los Angeles.

And now he’s popped back up as a World Cup winner again; in Glasgow he beat some very tasty opposition to take the Scratch Race ahead of men like Seb Mora, Ollie Wood and Leigh Howard.

We caught up with Ireland’s Felix English the day after his World Cup success: 

Felix English
Felix English in his yellow ‘tricot’ at the Copenhagen Six Day. Photo©Ed Hood

Was there a strategy for the Scratch going in to Glasgow – or just ‘play it by ear?’

“Refreshingly, there was no strategy! 

“I was tired going into the event after the racing – and crashing in – the Madison the previous night, so we went in happy to ‘play it by ear’. 

“One thing I was taking into this weekend was my hesitation in previous races which I think sometimes comes down to going into the race with a plan!”

Talk us through your race – European Champion Mora is a big scalp to take.

“The race couldn’t have gone any better for me, really. 

“As I said, I was pretty tired after a late night and not much eating in-between the Madison and the Scratch qualifier/final. 

“I stayed attentive early on and managed to avoid doing any work, then was able to see my moment to take a lap with a group of five. 

“I knew the guys were feeling it a bit so I took the moment to go immediately with Ollie Wood (GB) and Michele Scartezzini (Italy) when they attacked to take a second lap, pretty much straight away. 

“From then, I was ahead of the race and with Mora getting his second lap quite late I felt pretty confident that I was going to win.”

Does this result qualify you for The Worlds and the Olympics in Tokyo?

“Unfortunately not; there’s no Scratch in Tokyo but it does push me right back up in the World Rankings, so I’ll be lining up for the World Championships again in March.”

Did you compete in anything else at Glasgow – if so, how did it go?

“I rode the Madison on Saturday night – it was going pretty smoothly until I came down. 

“Mark Downey and I had purposefully ridden a really quiet race and were planning on getting more involved in the last 60 laps. 

“We tried a late attack with the Germans but it wasn’t to be.”

Felix English
Felix English concentrates on Copenhagen’s Ballerup boards. Photo©Ed Hood

Were you at the Minsk World Cup and will you be participating in any others?

“I wasn’t in Minsk but I am heading to Hong Kong, New Zealand and Australia for the next three World Cups.”

Where do you get your track training in Felix? 

“I live and train in Palma, Mallorca.”

Who coaches you?

“I’ve been bouncing between coaches for the past 18 months but the last three or four months I’ve coached myself on the road and Martyn Irvine has been coaching me on the track. 

“This result was a nice confidence boost in believing in myself as a coach!”

I notice you won the Irish Omnium Championship – where is that held?

“It’s run at an outdoor track in Dublin called the Sundrive Velodrome, it’s a big 458.8 metres tarmac track built in the 50’s and resurfaced in 2009.” 

Your Madison partnership with Mark Downey has produced some nice results together…

“Yeah, we’ve had some successes. 

“We’ve started trying to rotate the squad between races now because last year I had a really heavy run of competition. 

“I rode the Europeans followed by five World Cups on the bounce which really took its toll once I hit World Championships.”

2013 to 2016 you were a ‘Crit King’ in the UK – why the change of focus?

“I just got a little tired of it. 

“I’d started riding the track again and saw myself being about to compete with some of the best guys in the world – not something that was on the horizon in my road career! 

“Although I think I’ll be back to racing a few UK Crits through Spring / Summer 2020 with a new team.”

How do you fare for financial support being outside of a team structure?

“I’m a funded athlete with Sport Ireland – similar to the GB setup with their funding. 

“It’s performance based, so we all need to hit certain criteria which then determines the size of your grant.”

We saw you at the now late, lamented Copenhagen Six Day – is that an experience you would like to repeat?

“I loved Copenhagen Six Day, even if I was a little sick. 

“It was tough going straight from Berlin Six Day but I’d definitely like to go back – maybe next year?”

Felix English
Felix English changes with Mark Downey at the Six Days of Berlin in 2018. Photo©Ed Hood

Still on your trusty Felt I see.

“We recently replaced the five or six year-old Felts with … new Felts!” 

“Different paint scheme this time.”

Those green ‘Irish’ Bont shoes look pretty cool

“Yeah, I’m pretty lucky to be sponsored by Bont as (for me anyway) they’re the best shoes on the market, especially on the track.”

Do you still get asked about; ‘that time when you beat Chris Hoy in a sprint?

“Less often but it still happens occasionally. 

“I find it quite embarrassing as it’s not something that’s easy to be proud of, ha ha! 

“I tend to laugh it off…”

Here at VeloVeritas, we’ll keep an eye on the forthcoming World Cups for Felix in the results.

Ed Hood
Ed Hood
Ed's been involved in cycling for over 50 years. In that time he's been a successful time triallist, a team manager and a sponsor of several teams and clubs. He's also a respected and successful coach and during the winter months was often working in the cabins at the Six Days for some of the world's top riders. Ed remains a massive fan of the sport and couples his extensive contacts with an inexhaustible enthusiasm for the minutiae and the history of our sport. In February 2023 however, our dear friend and beloved colleague Ed suffered a devastating stroke and faces an uncertain future; Ed has lost his ability to speak, to read, and has lost movement on the right side of his body. He's working with speech and physical therapists on rehabilitation, but all strokes are different and each patient responds differently, so unfortunately recovery is one day at a time. Ed ran his own business installing windows, and will probably not be able to work again. Please consider joining us to make a contribution to Ed's GoFundMe page to help stabilise and secure his future.

Related Articles

Michael Mørkøv – the World’s No.1 Lead-out Man

It has been said by many people that Michael Mørkøv is the best lead-out man in the peloton and if Mark Cavendish thinks so, then it must be true. Michael is back at Cav’s side to help him take his 35th, history making Tour de France stage win. We caught up with the flying Dane before he flew to the Tour Colombia.

Katie Archibald – Another Hugely Successful European Championships

Most of the hugely successful GB Olympic cycling team are taking a break - but not Scotland's Katie Archibald who undertook a hugely successful campaign at the recent European Track Championships in Paris. And that's before we talk about her racing and winning at the London Six Day... We caught up with her post Paris but pre-London to discuss her two golds and one silver medal Euro haul.

Leo Konig – “Now other riders know they have to look out for us”

Leo Lonig was with NetApp in 2012 and there was a TTT win in the Coppi-Bartali, a third on GC in the Tour of Utah and stage win in the Tour of Britain. But this year has seen him reach the highest level in the sport with stage wins in two World Tour races and sit eighth on GC in one of the World’s greatest races as the climax approaches.

Dougie Young – Belgium is a Different World

From jousting with ‘Kermesse King’ Mario Willems to shelf stacking at Tesco, it’s been a bit of a roller coaster week or two for Glasgow Wheelers’ 20 year-old, Dougie Young. We caught him between shifts to give us tales of a summer spent in a land where cyclists aren’t a nuisance and bike racing doesn’t induce blank stares or shakes of the head.

At Random

Franco Marvulli – On His Last Season Before Retirement

This Six Day season marks the end of an era. Depending upon which source you consult, Franco Marvulli of Switzerland has ridden somewhere between 112 and 117 Six Days, this makes him the most prolific rider on the circuit by a considerable margin – Robert Bartko for example has ridden 75, Iljo Keisse has 72 starts. Marvulli has won 32; not to mention four world titles – two in the scratch and two in the madison and Olympic silver in the same discipline. So how come his ‘goodbye’ isn’t a bigger deal?

Mark Cavendish in Form

Mark Cavendish in Form. Another day, another bunchy and-seemingly inevitably-another win to Cav. He is an amazing bike rider, with an incredible knack for winning, and as regular and almost easy as his wins at the Tour seem, he is beating some very good bike riders and teams who are often racing solely to beat him.

Raymond Delisle

Here at VeloVeritas we were saddened to hear of the recent loss of one of the names from our youth. Former French professional champion and Tour de France ace Raymond Delisle died recently at the age of 70. One of those super cool Peugeot riders from the late 60's and early 70's with names like Pingeon, Thevenet, Danguillaume, Ovion - and Delisle, they even sounded classy.

The VV View: Pantani Revisionism, Qatar Worlds, CIRC and Raleigh

I can remember perfectly where I was when Marco Pantani died; sitting in my living room in Dysart. The flash came over Eurosport News and I rang Viktor to tell him; ‘hardly surprising’ was the reply. I knew what he meant, the little Italian’s life had been on a self destructive spiral for a some time - rehab or disaster were the only two possible destinations. It was the Spartan philosophers who first coined the expression, ‘never speak ill of the dead.’ And whilst it’s always dreadfully sad to see a young life wasted, I’m puzzled by the current revisionist accounts of his life which are doing the rounds on the 10th anniversary of his death.