• Home
  • Other Sports
  • Welsh Star Josh Tarling Says It’S Cool To Be New And Youngest British Champion

Welsh Star Josh Tarling Says It’s Cool To Be New And Youngest British Champion

Teenager Josh Tarling blew away the rest of the field to become the British men’s time trial champion as Lizzie Holden claimed the women’s crown at the Croft Circuit near Darlington. Tarling is just 19 but the 6ft 4in tall Welshman towered over his rivals in more ways than one, putting more than a minute into them over the course of 41.1 kilometres as he won in a time of 48 minutes 50 seconds in windy conditions in north Yorkshire.

By Hannah Blackwell

Teenager Josh Tarling blew away the rest of the field to become the British men’s time trial champion as Lizzie Holden claimed the women’s crown at the Croft Circuit near Darlington.

Tarling is just 19 but the 6ft 4in tall Welshman towered over his rivals in more ways than one, putting more than a minute into them over the course of 41.1 kilometres as he won in a time of 48 minutes 50 seconds in windy conditions in north Yorkshire.

He is the youngest rider to win the title.

Bahrain-Victorious’ Fred Wright was second, 63 seconds down, with Tarling’s Ineos Grenadiers’ team-mate Connor Swift in third, but nobody could touch the young Welshman as he claimed his first win at senior level.

“It sounds pretty cool, doesn’t it?” said Tarling, who was snapped up by the Ineos Grenadiers on a three-year deal last winter.

“I’m super happy. We had a plan, it was definitely an aggressive plan and we gave it a go.”

Last year Tarling won the world time trial title at junior level.

Here, he skipped the under-23 category and only looked out of place in terms of how dominant he was. Tarling is 360 days younger than Josh Charlton, who took the men’s under-23 title earlier in the day.

Wright, who came into the race still dealing with some raw emotions following the death of his team-mate Gino Mader at the Tour de Suisse last week, could only admire Tarling’s ride.

“As a ride, I was really pleased with it, Wright told the PA news agency. “It’s just a shame there was a massive kid who’s put a minute into me, so what can you do?

“He’s a super talent and I think he’s going to be the next big thing in time trialling.”

It is the third year in a row an Ineos rider has taken the title. Ethan Hayter – winner of the last two national championships – was unable to defend his title due to a broken collarbone, while Geraint Thomas also withdrew and is now expected to also sit out Sunday’s road race.

But even with some elite riders missing, Tarling’s margin of victory left little doubt as to his superiority.

Holden won the women’s event by 14 seconds from Anna Morris and 16 from Elinor Barker, completing the 27.4km course – two laps of the route – in a time of 37 minutes and two seconds.


The 25-year-old Manx rider was third in last year’s time trial as Joss Lowden took the title, and second as an under-23 rider in 2019, but this was her first time on the top step of the podium.

“It’s very special,” Holden said. “It means a lot. I had high expectations because I’ve been close many times before, and with Joss not being here, I thought it could actually be possible.

“But you never know until it happens. When I found out after I crossed the line, I couldn’t believe it.”

Holden, who left British squad Le Col-Wahoo last winter to move up to the WorldTour level with UAE Team ADQ, now hopes the win will help her case as she vies for selection for the Tour de France Femmes at the end of the month.

“Hopefully this result helps my side of it, but in the next few weeks I should hear,” said Holden, who rode in the inaugural edition of the race last summer.

“It was pretty special. I’ve never experienced a race organised like that and with the fans, it definitely felt like a different level, that’s for sure.”

Related News

Luke Littler (left) shakes hands with Gerwyn Price. Pic. Alamy

Gerwyn Price Goes From Electrifying to Brutally Fried by Luke Littler Inside 10 Minutes

Gerwyn Price let a commanding position slip as Luke Littler produced a stunning fightback to win night seven of the Premier League Darts in Dublin.

Paul Jones | Mar 20, 2026
Cricket how it used to be - a spectator watches the final cricket match at St Helen's. Pic. Owen Morgan

Modern Cricket . . . the Biggest Niche Sport in the World

The new cricket season begins in just a couple of weeks’ time, but the number of eyeballs on Glamorgan v Yorkshire will be very small beer in global terms, as Andrew Weeks outlines.

Andrew Weeks | Mar 19, 2026
Wales' Jonny Clayton celebrates after winning. Pic. Alamy

The Ferret Digs in . . . Jonny Clayton Proves he Can Play Through the Pain

Jonny Clayton insists he has learned to battle through the pain barrier when gout strikes after limping his way to a dominant victory on night six of the Premier League Darts in Nottingham.

David Parsons | Mar 13, 2026
Rosie Eccles. Pic. Alamy

Rosie Eccles Ends Olympic Dream . . . But Will Fight for Wales at Commonwealth Games

Rosie Eccles has decided to step away from the GB Boxing World Class Programme and will not chase qualification for the 2028 Summer Olympics.

David Williams | Mar 06, 2026
Luke Littler (L) shakes the hand of Johnny Clayton (R). Pic. Alamy

Jonny Was Good . . . But Luke Littler was Something Special in Cardiff

The roar that greeted Jonny Clayton inside the Utilita Arena Cardiff suggested Welsh darts fans believed this might finally be his night.

Paul Jones | Mar 06, 2026
Jonny Clayton. Pic. Alamy

The Ferret and The Ice Man Hope to Bring a Welsh Duel to the Boil in Cardiff

Jonny Clayton admits he has no idea who the Cardiff crowd would side with if he and Gerwyn Price set up an all-Welsh final on Premier League night five.

Gareth James | Mar 05, 2026