Kristian House

Kristian House
Personal information
Full nameKristian House
NicknameThe Dude[1]
Born (1979-10-06) 6 October 1979 (age 44)
Canterbury, Kent, United Kingdom
Team information
DisciplineRoad
RoleRider
Rider typeBreakaway specialist[2]
Amateur teams
2003Team PCA Orbea Veneto Zeus
2003Colombia–Selle Italia (stagiaire)
2004Bendigo
2005Midex T-Mobile
Professional teams
2006Recycling.co.uk
2007Navigators Insurance
2008–2015Rapha Condor–Recycling.co.uk
2016–2017ONE Pro Cycling
Major wins
One-day races and Classics
National Road Race Championships (2009)

Kristian House (born 6 October 1979 in Canterbury, England)[3] is a British former racing cyclist who rode for the JLT–Condor team from 2008 to 2015, and joined ONE Pro Cycling in 2016.[4] He was the 2009 British Road Race Champion.[5] He has raced in Europe and Australia. He rode for Great Britain in UCI World Cup track events. In 2006, he rode for the Recycling.co.uk team and in 2007 he signed for Navigators Insurance.

Kristian House was born in Britain but moved to the United States as a child, growing up initially in New Jersey and then Austin, Texas, where he began racing as a junior. At 17 he began racing in Belgium, where he stayed for two-and-a-half years. He was selected for the Great Britain Under-23 squad at the UCI Road World Championships in 2000 and 2001,[6] although he did not compete in 2000 after crashing out of Paris-Tours at the same corner as Jan Ullrich. After considering retiring from the sport at the age of 23 due to not securing a professional contract, he joined the Team GB track endurance squad after being introduced to team coach Simon Jones by John Herety, the manager of the British road team.[2]

After representing Britain in road and track world championships, he concentrated on road-racing in 2006 after joining the Recycling.co.uk team, now managed by Herety, and won ten races in Europe and Tasmania. They included Ireland's FBD Insurance Rás, where he overhauled Danny Pate. After one year with the American UCI Professional Continental team Navigators, House returned to the UK to link up with Herety again at Rapha Condor–Recycling.co.uk.[2]

In 2009 House became national road race champion in Abergavenny, having finished in the top five six times previously: initially joining the breakaway to provide anticipated support to his planned team leaders for the race, Chris Newton and Tom Southam, House was part of a trio alongside Dan Lloyd and Peter Kennaugh that caught race leader Chris Froome with 800 metres to go, before House won the sprint for the line. He remained with the Rapha Condor team until 2016, when he joined ONE Pro Cycling.[2] In April 2017 he announced that he would retire from competition at the end of the season.[7] In December of that year, JLT-Condor announced that House would be rejoining the team for the following year, taking up a role as the team's performance manager.[8]

House was granted the Freedom of the City of London in 2014.[9]

  1. ^ Hickmott, Larry (14 August 2009). "The Dude: Kristian House". British Cycling. Retrieved 5 August 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d Cite error: The named reference rouleur was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ "Profile". velobios.co.
  4. ^ "New Riders for 2016". oneprocycling.com. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  5. ^ "Olympic stars shocked in national". news.bbc.co.uk.
  6. ^ "Brits in the Under-23 World Road Race 1998-2007". Cycling Weekly. 23 September 2008. Retrieved 18 May 2018.
  7. ^ Pitt, Vern (27 April 2017). "Kristian House retires". Cycling Weekly. Retrieved 18 May 2018 – via PressReader.
  8. ^ "Kristian House rejoins JLT Condor in new role". JLT–Condor. 11 December 2017. Retrieved 18 May 2018.
  9. ^ "Grant awarded Freedom of the City". Condor Cycles. 3 June 2014. Retrieved 18 May 2018.