Share

Racing

Michael Rogers retires due to heart problems

Former Team Sky man calls time on career after winter diagnosis

Michael Rogers (Tinkoff) has been forced to retire from professional cycling due to heart problems after more than 15 years in the pro peloton, during which he won three world time trial championships.

Australian ace Rogers, 36, was due to retire at the end of this season but had hoped to compete at one final Tour de France and possibly the Olympic Games.

However, after cardiac examinations detected a heart arrhythmia during the winter, Rogers raced just two days at the Dubai Tour this season, and today announced his immediate retirement from the sport.

Michael Rogers has called time on his career due to heart problems (pic: Sirotti)

Former Team Sky man Rogers – a three-time Grand Tour stage winner – released a statement, which read: “All great dreams eventually come to an end, and today it’s time to conclude mine by announcing my retirement from racing.

“Recent cardiac examinations have identified occurrences of heart arrhythmia which have never been detected beforehand.

“This latest diagnosis, added to the congenital heart condition I was diagnosed with in 2001, means that my competitive career must end. My last race being the Dubai Tour in February.

“In hindsight I’m grateful my original cardiac condition, a malformation of the aortic valve, remained stable until recently, allowing me to compete from my humble beginnings in the Australian outback town of Griffith, all the way to top of the professional ranks.

“Whilst I’m disappointed to miss my 13th Tour de France and a chance to compete at my fifth Olympic Games, I’m not prepared to put my health in jeopardy. The opportunity of being a professional cyclist is that after retirement the challenge of a whole new career beckons.”

Rogers turned professional with Mapei-QuickStep in 2001, having raced as a stagiaire at the end of the previous season.

He stayed on when the team merged to form QuickStep-Davitamon and then joined T-Mobile in 2006 – having won the world time trial championship in each of the last three seasons – before signing for Team Sky in 2011.

While at Team Sky, Rogers was an integral part of Bradley Wiggins’ team as he became the first British rider to win the Tour de France in 2012 – Rogers himself finished 23rd, Team Sky’s third-best finish behind Wiggins and second-placed Chris Froome.

He also won Bayern-Rundfahrt, finished second behind Wiggins at the Criterium du Dauphine and enjoyed top-ten finishes at the Tour Down Under and Tour de Romandie as Sky finished top of the UCI WorldTour team rankings.

Michael Rogers was an integral part of Team Sky’s squad in 2012, helping Bradley Wiggins win the 2012 Tour de France (pic: Sirotti)

Rogers signed for the Tinkoff team (then Saxo-Tinkoff) the following year, and – after a provisional suspension was lifted, when contaminated meat led to a positive test for clenbuterol at the Japan Cup – the Australian began targeting more individual success.

Two stage wins at the Giro d’Italia immediately followed as he returned to the professional peloton, before a Tour de France stage win followed.

He was a domestique as Alberto Contador won the 2015 Giro d’Italia and retires having raced at 15 Grand Tours in all with a best finish of sixth at the 2009 Giro.

Rogers won the UCI World Time Trial Championship in three consecutive years, the first after Britain’s David Millar was stripped of his title for doping (pic: Sirotti)

“I worked on and off the bike with exceptionally smart and talented people, created lasting friendships, smiled and laughed lots, made a bunch of mistakes, cried myself to sleep a few times, travelled the world and learned to speak foreign languages,” Rogers wrote of his career.

“Did I mention that I had the time of my life? All of this thanks to one dream – to become a professional cyclist.”

Before paying tribute to his family, Rogers concluded: “I’d like to take this opportunity to thank all my former team-mates, personnel and team managers from the respective teams I raced with. The endless amounts of fun we had together will always be at the forefront of my mind.

“Many of you have had, and continue to have, a big influence on my life. A further mention goes to my worldwide fan base. Your support during the good times and the bad is greatly appreciated.

“I’ll particularly miss the riders, personnel and management of Team Tinkoff. Owner Oleg Tinkov is by no means your typical cycling stereotype. He is a one-of-a-kind supporter of our sport and I hope he reconsiders his decision to leave cycling at the end of the year.”

Read the full statement below.

Michael Rogers’ statement

My first recollection of professional cycling was in 1986, when I was seven years old. My family was new to cycling. At the time cycling in Australia was not a mainstream sport and the only way to follow the professional peloton was via magazine subscription. Luckily my elder brothers and I were the beneficiaries of VHS recordings of the Tour of Flanders, Paris-Roubaix and the complete 21 stages of the Tour de France, posted to us by my mother’s relatives in the Netherlands.

I don’t know how many hours I spent during my childhood years engrossed in what was happening on those tapes. During my early teens my mind was solely occupied with professional cycling, so much so that my default response to the friendly request, “Let’s go hang out at the shopping mall after school” offers was plain and simply: “No”. My postschool time had already been mapped out: rush home, have a quick snack, turn on the TV and study the nuances of yet another pro race. Team names such as PDM, Panasonic, RMO – just to name a few – were the subject of long discussion during family meals. I felt like I was put on earth to become a professional cyclist. It was my dream.

Sound like an interesting dream?

It became reality. I got the job. My professional cycling career spanned 16 years.

I was the first person in cycling history to win three consecutive professional world time trial championships.

I won stages at the Tour de France and Giro d’Italia.

I represented Australia at four Olympic Games.

I worked on and off the bike with exceptionally smart and talented people, created lasting friendships, smiled and laughed lots, made a bunch of mistakes, cried myself to sleep a few times, travelled the world and learned to speak foreign languages. Did I mention that I had the time of my life? All of this thanks to one dream – to become a professional cyclist.

All great dreams eventually come to an end, and today it’s time to conclude mine by announcing my retirement from racing.

Recent cardiac examinations have identified occurrences of heart arrhythmia which have never been detected beforehand. This latest diagnosis, added to the congenital heart condition I was diagnosed with in 2001, means that my competitive career must end. My last race being the Dubai Tour in February.

In hindsight I’m grateful my original cardiac condition, a malformation of the aortic valve, remained stable until recently, allowing me to compete from my humble beginnings in the Australian outback town of Griffith, all the way to top of the professional ranks.

Whilst I’m disappointed to miss my 13th Tour de France and a chance to compete at my fifth Olympic Games, I’m not prepared to put my health in jeopardy. The opportunity of being a professional cyclist is that after retirement the challenge of a whole new career beckons. And even more importantly, I married the woman of my dreams 11 years ago, and together we are raising three particularly animated daughters.

I’d like to take this opportunity to thank all my former team-mates, personnel and team managers from the respective teams I raced with. The endless amounts of fun we had together will always be at the forefront of my mind. Many of you have had, and continue to have, a big influence on my life. A further mention goes to my worldwide fan base. Your support during the good times and the bad is greatly appreciated.

I’ll particularly miss the riders, personnel and management of Team Tinkoff. Owner Oleg Tinkov is by no means your typical cycling stereotype. He is a one-of-a-kind supporter of our sport and I hope he reconsiders his decision to leave cycling at the end of the year.

Lastly but not least, my biggest expression of gratitude belongs to my personal team – my wife Alessia, our three children, Sofia, Matilde and Emily, my mother and father Sonja and Ian and brothers Peter and Deane. Since leaving home at the age of 16, everything except cycling became second priority. Subsequently I missed almost every family occasion – happy and sad. While on the subject of family, I’m happy to see the youngest generation of the Rogers family starting their own journeys within the cycling world. I hope their childhood dreams become reality, like mine did.

Michael Rogers

Newsletter Terms & Conditions

Please enter your email so we can keep you updated with news, features and the latest offers. If you are not interested you can unsubscribe at any time. We will never sell your data and you'll only get messages from us and our partners whose products and services we think you'll enjoy.

Read our full Privacy Policy as well as Terms & Conditions.

production