GB
  
You are currently viewing the United Kingdom version of the site.
Would you like to switch to your local site?
10 MIN READ TIME

NEW CYCLE

Catching up with Hamish Bond

PROFILE

PHOTOGRAPHY STEVE McARTHUR

“As an elite athlete I love nothing more than somebody telling me I can’t do something.”

Only 12 months after winning gold in the men’s pair in Rio with partner Eric Murray, Hamish Bond is preparing for the upcoming world championships. Only this time he will be racing in Norway – on a bicycle.

Row360 catches up with Bond to hear more about his remarkable transformation from elite rower to elite cyclist in the space of just one year.

When did you know that you were going to switch sports?

I had it in my mind before Rio that I was keen to give it a shot. I had cycled a bit for training in rowing and I was intrigued to see where I could get if I gave it my full attention. The plan was to give it four or five months and perhaps get to the New Zealand national championships. I figured at that stage I would probably then go back to rowing. Then one thing led to another and I dived down the rabbit hole and I still haven’t found the bottom. I had enough success to keep me hungry and interested and looking for more. I think my trainer, Dan Plews, was probably the first person to put the idea of Tokyo 2020 in front of me and since then it has been about finding out firstly, if I’m good enough and secondly, how to get there.

Can you say which is harder, rowing or cycling?

I think anything is as hard as you want to make it. I guess rowing is physically harder on the body - you can’t row at a hard level for five hours, but you can bike for five hours. The fact that rowing is a whole-body workout makes the physical sensation of rowing yourself to exhaustion more painful, or at least a slightly different feeling to what you can reach cycling.

Read the complete article and many more in this issue of Row360
Purchase options below
If you own the issue, Login to read the full article now.
Single Digital Issue Issue 019 - Aug | Sep 2017
 
£6.99 / issue
This issue and other back issues are not included in a new subscription. Subscriptions include the latest regular issue and new issues released during your subscription. Row360
Annual Digital Subscription £24.99 billed annually
Save
40%
£4.17 / issue

This article is from...


View Issues
Row360
Issue 019 - Aug | Sep 2017
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


Row 360
Team Sheet: Our writers
A rower, photographer and writer, Benedict discovered
Bulletin.
HUDSON Boat Works are supplying FISA with more than
Jaws
Fraser River, British Columbia
Inked
World Cup III, Lucerne
PAY ATTENTION
The psychology of focus and motivation in rowing
Rowing Blazers
A START-UP FOUNDED BY A TEAM OF ELITE ROWERS IS BRINGING THE BLAZER BACK TO ITS ORIGINS
Happy Days.
Having a difficult day? Perhaps you have time for a
Different Strokes
TIB ROWING CLUB BERLIN
Go Faster Stripes
776BC introduces Motion
SARASOTA
Guide to the 2017 World Rowing Championships
IF IT WASN’T SCREWED ON
Dr Ed Wittich, BSc. Applied Science, MSc.
GAME CHANGER
From Paralympic discus disqualification to the GB women’s eight: Rebecca Chin tells her story.
BLUE OPTIC COMMUNICATIONS
The musings of an Olympic rower in the midst of training camp
A Rower’s Regatta
Royal Canadian Henley 2017
Modern Rowing Style & Innovation
Scull & Sweep
Battle of the Orient
International University Rowing Regatta Xinjin, China July 2017
What You Don’t See At The Olympics
The technology behind those Olympic starts and what really goes on at the start of a race
Thames Rising
Winning Henley while working the nine to five? Ben Lewis makes it three in a row for Thames RC.
PLOVDIV
Under -23 World Championship
TRAKAI
Junior World Championships 2017
Last Word
Former rower, coach, umpire and accomplished sports marketing and management executive Patrick McNerney was appointed CEO of USRowing in mid- August and assumed leadership of the organisation in September.
Chat
X
Pocketmags Support