When Harry Hudson walked into a bike-fit studio in spring 2025, he wasn’t looking for direction – only data. As far as he was concerned, he didn’t need anything else. The then 17-year-old, who was already competing at the sharp end of international junior racing, did not have a coach and was not looking for one. He was visiting physiologist and biomechanic Craig Stevenson at Elite Edge in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, to garner some metrics on his form and efficiency. What happened next epitomised his approach to the sport.

“Harry took the results away, analysed them himself, added his own research, and built his own training plans,” says Tom Denwood, who oversaw Hudson’s racing at his old team Harrogate Nova. “At that point, he was effectively coaching himself.” In an era when almost every top junior is guided by an experienced performance coach, often an ex-pro, Hudson’s self-directed approach is remarkable, not least for the fact that it propelled him to a solo victory in the junior road race at the UCI World Championships in Kigali, Rwanda. No British junior male had ever won the title before. Lidl-Trek had already spotted Hudson’s potential, and snapped him up for their Future Racing development team. In doing so, they have bagged one of Britain’s most promising talents.

(Image credit: Andy Jones)

Growing up in the quaint village of Bamford in the Peak District, in the heart of England, Hudson was surrounded by climbs. His dad Paul would take him and his brother Finley, two years his junior, on routes around the Peaks, decked out in their Matlock CC jerseys. Speaking to CW in 2023, aged just 16, Hudson told us: “Dad would give us incentives to reach the top of the climbs, like 10p or 20p.” That interview took place because he had just become junior national hill-climb champion, finishing third overall – beating all but two senior riders. “My average power was 337 watts, which is 6.2W/kg, and my normalised power was 345 watts, around 6.4W/kg,” he said of his effort up The Struggle. He was right to be proud of the performance: it was vivid evidence of his exceptional talent.

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