Mark Cavendish

Sir Mark Cavendish
KBE
Cavendish at the 2012 Tour de France
Personal information
Full nameMark Simon Cavendish
NicknameManx Missile
Born (1985-05-21) 21 May 1985
Douglas, Isle of Man
Height1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Weight70 kg (154 lb; 11 st 0 lb)
Team information
Current teamRetired
Disciplines
  • Road
  • Track
RoleRider
Rider typeSprinter
Amateur team
2004Team Persil
Professional teams
2005–2006Team Sparkasse
2006–2011T-Mobile Team
2012Team Sky
2013–2015Omega Pharma–Quick-Step
2016–2019Team Dimension Data
2020Bahrain–McLaren
2021–2022Deceuninck–Quick-Step
2023–2024Astana Qazaqstan Team
Major wins
Road

Grand Tours

Tour de France
Points classification (2011, 2021)
35 individual stages
(20082013, 2015, 2016, 2021, 2024)
Giro d'Italia
Points classification (2013)
17 individual stages
(2008, 2009, 20112013, 2022, 2023)
2 TTT stages (2009, 2011)
Vuelta a España
Points classification (2010)
3 individual stages (2010)
1 TTT stage (2010)

Stage races

Ster ZLM Toer (2012)
Tour of Qatar (2013, 2016)
Dubai Tour (2015)

One-day races and Classics

World Road Race Championships (2011)
National Road Race Championships (2013, 2022)
Milan–San Remo (2009)
Scheldeprijs (2007, 2008, 2011)
Kuurne–Brussels–Kuurne (2012, 2015)
Milano–Torino (2022)
Münsterland Giro (2021)
Track
World Championships
Madison (2005, 2008, 2016)
Medal record
Men's road bicycle racing
Representing  Great Britain
World Championships
2011 CopenhagenRoad race
2016 DohaRoad race
Representing  Isle of Man
Island Games
2003 GuernseyIndividual Criterium
2003 GuernseyTeam Road Race
2003 GuernseyTeam Time Trial
Men's track cycling
Representing  Great Britain
Olympic Games
2016 Rio de JaneiroOmnium
World Championships
2005 Los AngelesMadison
2008 ManchesterMadison
2016 LondonMadison
Representing  Isle of Man
Commonwealth Games
2006 MelbourneScratch

Sir Mark Simon Cavendish KBE (born 21 May 1985) is a Manx retired professional cyclist. As a track cyclist he specialised in the madison, points race, and scratch race disciplines; as a road racer he was a sprinter. He is widely considered one of the greatest road sprinters of all time, and in 2021 was called "the greatest sprinter in the history of the Tour and of cycling" by Christian Prudhomme, director of the Tour de France.

In his first years as an elite track rider, Cavendish won gold in the madison at the 2005 and 2008 UCI Track Cycling World Championships riding for Great Britain, with Rob Hayles and Bradley Wiggins respectively, and in the scratch race at the 2006 Commonwealth Games riding for Isle of Man. After failing to win a medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics he did not compete on track again until 2015, subsequently winning his third UCI Track Cycling World Championships title with Wiggins in the madison in 2016, and an individual silver medal in the omnium at the 2016 Summer Olympics.

As a road cyclist, Cavendish turned professional in 2005 and achieved eleven wins in his first professional season. From 2008 until 2024, Cavendish won 35 Tour de France stages, putting him first on the all-time list, contributing to a third-highest total of 55 Grand Tour stage victories. He won the men's road race at the 2011 Road World Championships, becoming the second male British rider to do so after Tom Simpson. Cavendish has also won the points classification in all three of the grand tours: the 2010 Vuelta a España, the 2011 and 2021 Tour de France and the 2013 Giro d'Italia. In 2012, he became the first person to win the final Champs-Élysées stage in the Tour de France in four consecutive years.

Cavendish won seven Grand Tour stages in 2013, one in 2015 and four in 2016. This included a win on stage one of the 2016 Tour de France, claiming his first Tour de France yellow jersey. He crashed with Peter Sagan on stage four of the 2017 Tour de France, forcing him out of the race. Cavendish continued producing good results until August 2018, when he was diagnosed with Epstein–Barr virus. Before his diagnosis, Cavendish was able to compete in the 2018 Tour de France but was disqualified after not making the cut-off time on stage eleven. He returned to the Tour de France at the 2021 edition, winning four stages and his second points classification. In 2024, he claimed his 35th Tour stage win to break the overall stage victory record, previously shared with Eddy Merckx.

In the 2011 Queen's Birthday Honours, Cavendish was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) "for services to British Cycling." He also won the 2011 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award with nearly half of the votes going to him out of a field of ten nominees. In June 2024, Cavendish was awarded a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) in the 2024 Birthday Honours for "services to cycling and charity work." At the end of the year he was also awarded the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Lifetime Achievement Award.