Vicky Holland: Background, career highlights, quotes
Racing on the world stage for over a decade, three-time Olympian and Rio bronze medallist Vicky Holland's been instrumental in the growth of British triathlon. Here are some of her many highlights...
Arguably one of British triathlon’s greatest-ever competitors and ambassadors, few people get to achieve what Vicky Holland has in her sporting career. But, in a medal-heavy career, two particular achievements stand out. Here’s what you should know about the three-time Olympian…
Who is Vicky Holland?
After a childhood as a competitive swimmer before taking up middle-distance running, triathlon always seemed to be the natural sport for Vicky Holland, but she didn’t get into the sport until the second year of her degree at Loughborough University.
She certainly made up for lost time. Not only was Holland the first British woman to win an Olympic medal in triathlon, she was also the first to combine the accolade with a world title.
A late entrant to triathlon, Holland was also something of an even later bloomer within the sport. It took her five years of being on and around the podiums of World Triathlon Series events before she got to stand atop one, thanks to a victory in Cape Town in 2015.
That was the start of a glorious few years. Although injury dictated that 2017 was pretty much a write-off, the season was bookended by the two most memorable years of Holland’s competitive life.
First came that Olympic medal, bronze in colour and secured in dramatic fashion when Holland outsprinted her best pal Non Stanford in Rio.
The 2018 season was even more memorable as Holland emerged from a long injury lay-off with a dominant performance throughout the WTS series.
Victories in Leeds, Hamburg and Chicago boosted her to world champion, a deserved reward for a career whose path has at times been undulating.
It is testament to Holland’s resolve and fortitude that, as the curtain began to fall on her short-course professional career, she will forever be both world champion and an Olympic medallist.
In January 2023, she and her husband Rhys Davey – head coach with British Triathlon at the Leeds Triathlon Centre – welcomed daughter Emmeline Olivia Davey to the world.
By October, she was back on the race course, and in 2024 won her first European title, before calling it a day for good after finishing a phenomenal fourth at the WTCS Grand Final in Torremolinos.
How old is Vicky Holland?
Vicky Holland was born on 12 January 1986, making her 38 years old.
Vicky Holland’s career highlights
July 2010: A maiden top-five WTS finish in her first season
In her first World Triathlon Series season among the elite corps, Holland follows up a top-10 finish on her debut in Sydney with fifth place in Hamburg. Less than a week later, she also bags sixth on the streets of London.
May 2012: A strong showing in San Diego before the Olympics beckon
After a disappointing 2011 season, a second top-five WTS finish, this time in the Californian sun, helps earn Holland one of the six berths for Team GB at London 2012. Finishing 26th in the capital, Holland’s the second Brit home after fifth-placed Helen Jenkins.
August 2012: A first world championship
Holland joins up with Alistair Brownlee, Will Clarke and Non Stanford to earn Britain’s mixed relay team a gold medal at the world championships in Stockholm. Two years later, Holland’s part of the foursome that takes gold again.
July 2014: Holland teams up for Glasgow gold
The mixed relay event makes its debut at the Commonwealth Games and the English quartet of Holland, Jodie Stimpson and the Brownlee brothers storms to gold. With such a team, a win was never in question.
April 2015: A belated first WTS race win
Five years on from first competing in the WTS series, Holland registers her first WTS race victory in Cape Town, pulling away from Katie Zaferes of the USA and Switzerland’s Nicola Spirig in the closing stages of the run.
Despite another win in Edmonton, plus podium appearances in Hamburg and Chicago, Holland fails to make the top three overall in the series, finishing a respectable fourth.
August 2016: Holland makes British Olympic history
In her second Olympics, Holland makes history in Rio as the first British woman to win a triathlon medal at the Games.
But her bronze – behind champion Gwen Jorgensen and silver medallist Spirig – only came after she had outsprinted her housemate Non Stanford on the Copacabana beachfront.
April 2018: Commonwealth mixed relay silver
Selected again for the Commonwealth Games, Holland jets off to the Gold Coast to bag silver in the mixed team relay alongside the Brownlee brothers and Jess Learmonth.
September 2018: The Olympic medallist becomes world champion
After an injury-hit 2017 season when she barely made the start line of any races, Holland returns to the WTS circuit in the best style and form of her career.
Though Holland doesn’t take the win at the Grand Final on the Gold Coast, her second place – allied to victory in Leeds, Edmonton and Montreal, plus another second in Bermuda – confirms her world-champion status.
July 2021: A final tilt at further Olympic glory
Having been selected for her third and final Olympics at the age of 35, a crash on the bike leg dashes any hopes of matching, or even eclipsing, Holland’s Rio bronze.
The wet, greasy roads of Tokyo and its environs end Holland’s Olympic Games career as she comes home in 13th place.
September 2021: A third in London
That’s not all for the Brit, though, as come September Holland claims a well-earned third place in the Triple Mix event at Super League Triathlon, London.
Two months later she runs home in a solid 10th at the Abu Dhabi WTCS race, however five other British women finish ahead of her.
October 2023: Top 10 in her first race back since having a baby
Eight months on from giving birth to daughter Emmeline, Holland’s back in the GB tri-suit and finishing seventh at the World Triathlon Cup Tangier.
The same month, she follows that up with a 23rd in Rome and a 13th in Tongyeong.
November 2023: Podiums in Chile… kind of
Finishes third on the podium at the final race of the season after the first two women – Katie Zaferes and Teresa Zimovjanova (CZE) – are both controversially DSQ’d for taking the wrong turn on the run course.
July 2024: Second in Tizzy
At the World Triathlon Cup Tiszaujvaros, Hungary, she walks away with silver, her only podium and best result this season… so far.
July-October 2024: Goes out with a bang
Lines up alongside Max Stapley, Olivia Mathias and Sam Dickinson at the 2024 Mixed Relay World Champs and takes a terrific fourth.
In September she wins her first European title, in Vichy, France, ahead of Léonie Périault in second.
But she leaves one of her finest performances to the very last when she crosses the line in fourth place at the 2024 WTCS Grand Final in Torremolinos, Spain. Ahead of her are the newly-crowned Olympic champion Cassandre Beaugrand, Paris bronze medallist Beth Potter and Paris fourth-place finisher Emma Lombardi.
She retires as one of Team GB’s greatest female triathletes.
Vicky Holland quotes
On becoming world champion in 2018: “This season for me had always been about the Commonwealth Games and that was what I was training for. Since that point, things just fell into place.”
On winning Olympic bronze at the 2016 Games: “I didn’t fly out to Rio until the middle weekend, so I spent the first week in Leeds watching everything on television. I just remember watching Adam Peaty’s world record and getting so caught up in the excitement. Success breeds success.”
On her 13th place at the Tokyo Olympics: “That’s the beauty and pain of elite sport. Sometimes you don’t get what you think you deserve or what you think you are ready to deliver.”
Part of Tim Don’s Eagles team at London Super League Triathlon, Holland was surprised and delighted with her performance: “I’m shocked. Genuinely, I am,” she said. “I’ve had a weird 4-5 weeks since the Olympics with a lot of travel and quarantine, and a lack of training, I’ve had a heavy head cold and even this week I wasn’t sure I was going to race.
“From a team element I loved it. We finished on top, so I’m delighted with that. As for me to get a podium, it doesn’t happen that often any more and I’m delighted with that too.”
What’s next for Vicky Holland?
Now retired from racing for good, Holland will continue her stirling work as a commentator/pundit for triathlon, and is also training to be a coach.
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