At 27 years old, standing 1.81 meters tall and weighing 92 kg, Dutch cyclist Harrie Lavreysen is already regarded as the greatest sprinter in track cycling history and one of the sport’s all-time legends. During the 2024 UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Ballerup, Denmark, he once again made headlines by securing three additional world titles, bringing his career total to 16.

A Legendary Record That’s Far from Over
Since making his breakthrough in the early 2020s, Lavreysen has dominated the sprint disciplines, building an extraordinary list of achievements: six world titles in the team sprint, six in the individual sprint, three in the keirin, and one in the 1 km time trial. In Ballerup, he claimed victory in three of the four events he entered, missing out only in the keirin, where he was eliminated in the round of 16, preventing another historic triple crown.
A five-time Olympic champion, Lavreysen continues to impress with remarkable consistency and an ever-expanding résumé. Considered “the greatest of all time” by many of his peers, his next major objective is the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, where he aims to surpass the record of seven Olympic titles held by Great Britain’s Jason Kenny (Lavreysen currently has six Olympic medals, five of them gold).
Nicknamed “Hat-trick Harrie” after winning three gold medals at the Paris Olympics, Lavreysen shows no signs of slowing down. Some of his competitors, such as Poland’s Mateusz Rudyk, have even labeled him an “extraterrestrial“, emphasizing his unprecedented dominance in the sport.
At just 27 years old, his career is far from over, and it is highly likely that he will maintain his supremacy at least until the 2028 Los Angeles Games. Many analysts and former cyclists agree that the powerful Dutchman could retire with over 30 world titles and the most Olympic gold medals ever won in track cycling.