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PATRIOT GAMES
Cycling Weekly
|April 24, 2025
What does it mean to change the flag on your jersey? Tom Davidson explores how nationality swaps in cycling reveal deeper questions of identity, belonging and ambition
Traitor, defector, turncoat... The Australian news headlines did not hold back on Matthew Richardson. In the space of a week, the track sprinter went from being the country’s hero, winner of three Olympic medals - two silver and one bronze - to the perpetrator of a “grand betrayal” that would leave “an asterisk on his glittering career”. What had he done that was so heinous? He had “ditched” Australia, as the headline writers Down Under put it, and swapped his allegiance to their long-standing sporting rival, Great Britain.
Although born in the Anglo-Saxon town of Maidstone, Richardson does not have a Kentish accent. At age nine, he moved to Australia, his family relocating for his father’s job. There, he developed an Aussie twang and became a track sprinter, eventually representing Australia at two Olympic Games. He left last summer’s Paris Olympics as his nation’s darling, but the honeymoon lasted only a week. Unbeknown to his Australian team-mates, coaches and even his housemate, Richardson had swapped his racing nationality to his country of birth. The bombshell made headlines internationally. “Furious Aussies slam Olympics hero who sensationally defected,” read a particularly fruity one.
Though uncommon, the nationality Switch is a well-established phenomenon among cyclists. The UCI allows a swap under specific conditions: either the rider has lost their civil nationality; has decided to swap upon reaching the age of majority; or holds dual citizenship. Richardson, still with a British passport in hand, qualified under the latter. It was then a matter of basic paperwork, a process that took three months to complete.
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