Due to maintenance work, we won't be sending any emails from canyon.com from 17/08 22:30 - 18/08 04:00 CET.
A multi-discipline phenom who has dominated cyclocross and road racing at every level so far, Zoe Bäckstedt is the proof – in our opinion, at least – that fast is fearless.

About Zoe Bäckstedt

Date of birth
24th September 2004
Nationality
British
Hometown
Belgium
  • CX World Championships – U23 (2024)
    1st
  • Antwerp Port Epic Ladies (2024)
    2nd
  • Road World Championships – Junior (2021, 2022)
    1st

Racing

Team
CANYON//SRAM Racing
Discipline
Road, Cyclocross
“Hearing people shout my name in a race gives me so much joy.”
Zoe Bäckstedt – CANYON//SRAM Racing


Behind the athlete

Born to cyclist parents – one of whom is a famous Paris-Roubaix winner – and with an older sister who races in the WorldTour, it’s fair to say that Zoe Bäckstedt is both blessed and cursed by her family’s cycling background.
She might be naturally gifted, but there is a certain pressure of expectation foisted upon the young Brit’s shoulders. Nonetheless, the teenager has taken to top level bike racing like a (very fast) duck to water.
As a junior, she dominated on both the road and in cyclocross, with three world championship gold medals between the two disciplines. She then won the cyclocross U23 world title in 2024, and has stepped up to the WorldTour on the road with CANYON//SRAM Racing (under the tutelage of her father Magnus, who is lead sports director), almost winning a first pro race already at the Antwerp Port Epic in May.
With progression as fast as this, it’s hard to pin Zoe down on the exact type of a road rider she is, or what she might become:
“I’d say I’m probably a classics-type rider. I’m good on short, sharp climbs. Something that’s 30 seconds to one minute max. I’m quite punchy, I guess from my cyclocross background. I have quite a lot of skill when it comes to cornering or riding in small gaps and navigating the bunch, and I have a good kick on me.”
With attributes like those, we’re looking forward to seeing where the road will take her.
Zoe Bäckstedt

Crossover star

Some believe that Zoe’s greatest talent is on the cyclocross bike, however.
The 2023/24 season was her first at elite level, and she managed a nice win in Gullegem, along with top fives at the big World Cups throughout the season. Rubbing shoulders with the likes of fellow super-talents Puck Pieterse and Fem van Empel, we’re expecting Zoe to make another jump in speed next season.
As for the main differences between ‘cross and the road, Zoe says she enjoys the focus required in the winter discipline:
“In cyclocross your heart rate is so high from the start, you’re always kind of out of gas and at your limit. You have to constantly be thinking about how hard you can push it. You’re under pressure because of how tired you are, so you have to really collect yourself and focus on literally just thinking about the lines you’re taking in the corners. It’s about not going so deep that you crash but going hard enough that you can make it through the corners with speed.”
Zoe Bäckstedt

Speed Dreams

As a very young rider still, it’s no surprise to regularly see Zoe with a big grin on her face at the races. She’s enjoying this gradual upwards progression, and continuing to learn, improve, and express herself on the bike.
“I love the feeling of speed when we’re going on a descent and there is a good flowy corner. You can be going at crazy speeds, but the bike is just taking you downhill. You’re just having fun! I remember one stage at the Vuelta [Femenina] this year. I was in the gruppetto, but we still took the descents so quick, and everyone enjoyed that part because we’d got over the climb and just wanted to have some fun on the downhill. It was so great. And then also stages where you have a super high average speed and you’re like ‘woah, I got to the finish so quickly!’ Everything just goes by so quickly and I really love that.”
It’s clear that, for Zoe, so much of racing is about the pure enjoyment of it – as it should be. Her speed dreams are quite simple, then:
“Racing with a smile on my face, being happy and enjoying the moment. Hearing the crowd as I go past. Hearing people shouting my name. I get so much joy in those moments.”
Content is loading
Loading animation image