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David Millar says he'll retire at end of 2014 season

Garmin-Sharp rider to bring curtain down on successful - and controversial - career

David Millar has revealed that he is to retire from racing at the end of the 2014 season. One of Britain’s most successful road cyclists, he is also arguably the most controversial, serving a two-year ban after confessing to EPO use.

The Garmin-Sharp rider, aged 36, has won stages in all three of cycling’s Grand Tours – the Tour de France, Giro d’Italia and Vuelta a España – and was also the first Briton to wear the leader’s jersey in all three of those races.

Millar, who is married with two young sons, confirmed his retirement in a video interview with the Dutch magazine, Weiler Revue.

"It has been quite organic really," he admitted. "You always think it is going to be a definitive moment but it hasn't been. It has kind of crept up and I am suddenly realising it is time. “

Last year, Millar won a stage of the Tour de France, and he reflected: “I can still be on top of the game – I know that – but it is a lot harder for me now and I want to be on top of my game next year, so I know I can get that out of me.

"With the motivation of knowing it is my last year, I know I can get the best out of myself."

He rejected the idea his body was getting weaker. “I think my body is actually getting stronger. It is just that I don't want it or need it as much as I did when I was younger. It is very much a conscious decision.”

Asked what he considered to be the high point of his career, Millar said: “My whole career is a highlight. I’d like to think years from now I’d remember this as being one part of my life rather than one moment in my life.”

In 2003, Millar won the World Time Trial Championship in Canada, but within a year was in disgrace after police arrested him while he was having dinner in his then hometown of Biarritz, France, with British Cycling performance director Dave Brailsford.

Police searched Millar’s home and found two syringes. Millar, then riding for Cofidis, insists he had stopped doping at that point and had kept them as a warning to himself, but his admission of having used EPO led to a two-year ban.

Following his return to the sport with Saunier-Duval in 2006, Millar became an high-profile critic of drug use within the peloton, and now sits on the athlete committee of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).

He was also one of the first riders signed up to Garmin-Sharp’s management company, Slipstream Sports, when Jonathan Vaughters was putting the squad together in 2007 and now has a stake in the business.

It was WADA’s successful challenge last year at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) of the British Olympic Association’s lifetime ban for drug cheats that paved the way for Millar to compete in the road race at London 2012.

He had acted as road captain when Mark Cavendish won the rainbow jersey in Copenhagen in 2011, but despite leading a strong Team GB performance at the Olympics for most of the race, the chance of a gold medal slipped away from Cavendish on the final Box Hill circuit.

Born on Malta to Scottish parents, his father’s career as a pilot took Millar to Scotland and Buckinghamshire and – after his parents divorced – Hong Kong.

His upbringing, and his racing career, including his downfall and subsequent return to the sport, are the subject of his powerful autobiography, Racing Through the Dark.

Millar's programme for 2014 remains unknown, but the Giro d'Italia and Tour de France both start in the UK, in Belfast and Leeds, respectively.

Later in the season, the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow may well be the event where the Scot decides to call it a day as he defends the time trial title he won at Delhi in 2010. 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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38 comments

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CyclingDan | 10 years ago
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I've always enjoyed watching Millar and his performances and he will inspire many potential cyclists to become champions and as others have said he is helping to sort out the problems with Drugs? Good Luck to him  41 and is/was a great cyclist as was Armstrong. Who wasn't taking drugs in that era? The trolls will always keep on trolling. Getting fed up of this Drugs and Armstrong talk.

No doubt Ill get a Lecture from Colin P in a moment!

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Fran The Man | 10 years ago
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Seems like RussFarr66 is somewhat unpopular hereabouts! Me, I just hope Millar has a brilliant season and that, when it's over, he stays in the sport in some role or another. "Evangelist" might be a bit much. "Mentor" might suit better. "Hypocrite" is out of order.

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jijiandnoah | 10 years ago
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Well I'll miss him being around; I've always found him one of the funniest and most articulate members of the Peloton and for that reason one of my favourites. I won't go in to the stupidity of calling him a hypocrite - as pointed out earlier those using the term clearly don't actually understand it - but I really like what Nick from Vulpine wrote about calling his son Millar; I guess it all comes down to whether you believe someone can make a mistake, take responsibility for it, then work as hard as possible to find redemption. I'd like my sons to grow up ready to both take responsibility for their mistakes and to forgive others who've done the same - and in this respect I agree: he is a great role model.

As others have said, his book's a good read - Jeremy Whittle's Bad Blood is another good insight (although no doubt now reads strangely in the light of the events of the past couple of years!...)

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timbola | 10 years ago
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David Millar - true gent, brilliant cyclist, great competitor, exciting racer, thought-provoking and should be in line for a DS and/or commentary role.
The whole family wish you well for your last season - go out with a bang and enjoy retirement  41

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11speedaddict | 10 years ago
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Truly my favourite Pro.
Funny and wers his heart on his sleeve.
He would make a brilliant pundit (after the watershed)
Lets hope he sees out his last season with a Giro or Tour win - ideally on one of the UK based stages

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notfastenough replied to ragtimecyclist | 10 years ago
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ragtimecyclist wrote:

Classy rider too if you ask me, loved his attack along the gutter on the Champs Elysees this year.

That was awesome. Even knowing it was never going to end in a stage win, I was cheering like mad at the TV. We were over at my parents, and everyone else was saying "is he going to win?" I insisted it was a sprinters' day, and was asked "Well what's the point? Why are you excited?" I blabbed something about spirit, giving it everything, the beauty of the sport, sponsorship TV time, controlling the race etc, and was stared at like I was an idiot!

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Leviathan | 10 years ago
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NB - "So the Tour really gets going tomorrow." [after the end of stage 3]
DM - "The Tour started on Saturday, Ned."

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Edgeley | 10 years ago
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That gutter attack was utterly brilliantly foolish. What a silly sport we love. Even if we know that he was doing it to get the sponsors' names on the telly as well as for the glory.

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