Ally Wollaston

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Born (2001-01-04) 4 January 2001 (age 25)
Auckland, New Zealand
Height170 cm (5 ft 7 in)[1]
DisciplineRoad
Track
Ally Wollaston
Wollaston in 2023
Personal information
Born (2001-01-04) 4 January 2001 (age 25)
Auckland, New Zealand
Height170 cm (5 ft 7 in)[1]
Team information
Current teamFDJ United–Suez
DisciplineRoad
Track
RoleRider
Amateur team
2020Velo Project
Professional teams
2021–2024NXTG Racing
2025–FDJ–Suez
Major wins
Road

Stage races

Tour of Britain (2025)

One-day races and Classics

National Road Race Championships (2023, 2026)
Great Ocean Road Race (2025, 2026)
Track
World Championships
Elimination (2024)
Omnium (2024)
Medal record
Women's track cycling
Representing  New Zealand
Olympic Games
Silver medal – second place2024 ParisTeam pursuit
Bronze medal – third place2024 ParisOmnium
World Championships
Gold medal – first place2024 BallerupOmnium
Gold medal – first place2024 BallerupElimination
Silver medal – second place2023 GlasgowTeam pursuit
Bronze medal – third place2024 BallerupScratch
UCI Junior Track World Championships
Gold medal – first place2019 FrankfurtIndividual pursuit
Silver medal – second place2019 FrankfurtTeam pursuit
Silver medal – second place2018 AigleTeam pursuit

Ally Wollaston (born 4 January 2001) is a New Zealand professional track racing cyclist and road cyclist riding for FDJ United–Suez.[2] She was a double-medallist at the 2024 Paris Olympics and is the first New Zealand rider to win two titles at the same track World Championships.

Wollaston was born on 4 January 2001 in Auckland, New Zealand.[3] She is the youngest of three sisters; her sister Nina has medalled at a Para-cycling road World Cup in 2019.[4] She grew up in Auckland but later moved to the Waikato.[5] She got into cycling through her family as they were helping out with the St Peter's School cycling team.[6] Wollaston was educated at St Peter's School, and as of 2024 is a part-time law student at the University of Waikato.[7][8]

Career

Wollaston was part of the New Zealand team that won the team pursuit race in Hong Kong as part of the 2019–20 UCI Track Cycling World Cup. She also won gold in the individual pursuit at the 2019 UCI Junior Track Cycling World Championships.[9]

Wollaston began racing professionally on the road for NXTG Racing in August 2021. In January 2022, Wollaston won the National criterium championships.[10] She then went to join her team in Europe and got her first win for the team at the Grand Prix du Morbihan on 14 May 2022. Wollaston was selected to represent New Zealand at the 2022 Commonwealth Games. However, she crashed and injured her wrist during stage two of the 2022 Tour de France Femmes, and was unable to compete at the Commonwealth Games.[11]

In 2023, Wollaston won her first national title, winning the New Zealand National Road Race Championships, as well as winning the Grand Prix Elsy Jacobs.

Wollaston started the 2024 season in good form and won a stage in the Tour Down Under in February. She developed knee problems, though, that required surgery at the end of March. After having missed the 2022 Commonwealth Games, this brought on fears of also missing the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, but the recovery went well. In June, she won two stages of the Volta a Catalunya in Spain.[12] At the Paris Olympics, Wollaston won silver in the team pursuit (alongside Nicole Shields, Bryony Botha, and Emily Shearman), and a bronze medal in the omnium.[13] At the 2024 UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Ballerup, Denmark, Wollaston become the first New Zealand rider to win two world championship titles at the same track world championships,[14] taking gold medals in the elimination race[15][16] and the omnium[14][17][18] as well as bronze in the scratch race.[19]

In 2025, Wollaston joined FDJ–Suez on a two year contract.[20] In February 2025, Wollaston won her first UCI Women's World Tour one-day race at the Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race.[21] In June 2025, Wollaston won Tour of Britain Women.[22]

Major results

References

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