‘Within ten minutes of sitting in the studio I was crying with laughter, I mean barely able to breathe’
Orla Chennaoui is not a former pro racer; she doesn’t come from a family of cyclists and she hasn’t spent a lifetime immersed in cycling culture. So how has she come to find herself hosting Eurosport’s cycling coverage and commenting on the biggest races in the world?
‘It’s an odd thing, I think, when I look at it in isolation,’ says Chennaoui as she reflects on her career in the media.
‘I learned to ride my bike as a kid. I lived in the countryside in Northern Ireland and would often spend my summer holidays on my bike with my two cousins, Maeve and Maria. We’d cycle to each other’s houses and then go play in the rivers and fields, but that’s as far as it went.
‘I remember there was one kid at school called Jim who was a competitive cyclist, and at the time we all thought it was weird that Jim shaved his legs. For us it was the definition of strange. I grew up after the time of Sean Kelly and Stephen Roche, so I was aware of the amazing things they’d done – the Irish don’t win very much – but I didn’t get back into cycling until work reintroduced me to it, and I fell in love with it straight away.’
Making moves
Chennaoui began her journalism career in print, then moved into radio, then local television in England, national television in Scotland and then to Sky, where she was a news correspondent at the age of 26.
This story is from the June 2023 - 139 edition of Cyclist UK.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the June 2023 - 139 edition of Cyclist UK.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Best of both worlds
The new Trek Madone blends the speed of the brand's quickest superbike with the lightness of its mountain-crushing Émonda to become the ultimate race bike
Eddy Merckx Pévèle Carbon
A versatile design that shows the pros and cons of flexible build options
Gravel ride: Girona Welcome to Cycling Central
Girona in Catalonia has become one of Europe's most popular cycling venues thanks to its weather, roads and culture. But it's still possible to leave the hordes behind by going off-tarmac
Revolutions and evolutions
The wheel may be a 5,000-year-old invention but designers are still finding ways to make it lighter, faster, safer and more stable.
Kitzbüheler Horn
The Austrian climb that dishes out pain
Cycling history in six items
In the first of a series on cyling's historical artefacts, Cyclist visits the KOERS Museum in Belgium to discover the pick of the exhibits.
Different times
What was the cycling world like 75 years ago? Now in his midnineties, Scottish former champion Ramsay Mackay remembers those times like they were yesterday
Big Ride: Alpe d'Huez - Climb and a half
No climb is as emblematic of the Tour de France as Alpe d'Huez. Ahead of its first appearance at the women's Tour, Cyclist takes a ride around it and up it. And then up it again
This Olympic Road Race might actually be worth watching
A punchy finale around Paris's Butte de Montmartre will bring the excitement usually missing from the Olympic Road Race, says Felix Lowe
Beryl Burton wins her first road Worlds
Beryl Burton claimed the first of two World Championships Road Race titles in 1960, becoming the first rider to win pursuit and road world titles in the same year