# What is DerbyWheel? Keirin goes global in new international cycling league

*By Simon | March 21, 2024*

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![24793309947_7f6cb31a9f_k](https://globalkeirin.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/06/24793309947_7f6cb31a9f_k.jpg)

DerbyWheel is an exciting initiative to bring the sporting excitement and
financial stability of Japanese and Korean keirin racing to a worldwide
audience.

Keirin is a bicycle racing format, with races taking place on the banked
circuits of velodromes. It was born in the Japanese port city of Kokura (now
Kitakyushu) in November 1948, becoming part of the world championship track
cycling programme in 1980, and making its Olympic debut at the 2000 games in
Sydney, Australia.

You may know keirin racing as ‘the one with the motorcycle’ – although in fact,
in Japan and Korea, riders are led out by a fellow bicycle rider acting as a
pacer.

Races are for 5 to 9 riders: international races take place over a total
distance of 1500 metres, but Japanese and Korean races can be up to 2800 metres
or more.

Riders must remain behind the pacer, controlling their speed, and jockeying for
position until the pacer exits the track, usually with around 750 metres to go…
at which point, the real racing begins, and it’s a straightforward charge to the
finish line.

![](https://img.youtube.com/vi/C-X2S50zHKs/maxresdefault.jpg)

_Yuji Matsuura wins the 2023 Grand Prix, and a prize of ¥137 million._

Keirin is a popular spectator sport in Japan, generating a reported US$ 10
billion in betting receipts annually, as one of only four sports in the country
in which gambling is legal. It was introduced to Korea in the wake of the Seoul
Olympics in 1988, where it now generates about US$ 2 billion annually.

Prize money from keirin racing is enough to support thousands of professional
riders in Japan and Korea. The lowest-ranked (male) riders can expect to earn
around US$ 50,000 per year (2017): riders in the elite category can earn many
times that, with the male winner of Japan’s year-end Grand Prix receiving a
prize in the region of ¥100 million (US$ 600,000).

## What is DerbyWheel?

DerbyWheel is an initiative backed by Korean investors, to repeat the successful
launch of keirin racing in Korea at a global scale.

DerbyWheel will operate a professional keirin league, with over 300 male and
female riders invited to join its inaugural season following induction sessions
in late 2023 and early 2024.

It will begin with an
[exhibition event](https://globalkeirin.com/what-is-the-latest-on-the-derbywheel-test-event/)
, originally planned to be held in Newport, Wales in the first half of 2024, but
subsequently delayed. No new date has yet been announced.

Race meetings will typically run across three days, Friday to Sunday, every two
weeks. Racing will later move to a weekly schedule.

[Embed from Getty Images](https://www.gettyimages.com/detail/1788086724)

Sellout crowds in London for Track Champions League

DerbyWheel’s CEO from July 2023 until May 2025 was James Pope, who created the
UK’s Revolution velodrome race series and London Nocturne criterium, before
taking up the role of Event Director for the UCI Track Champions League. Pope’s
replacement as CEO has not yet been confirmed.

DerbyWheel has also partnered with Sportradar Group for integrity services, and
an as-yet unnamed agency for anti-doping testing.

## Who is racing in DerbyWheel?

DerbyWheel competitors will range from up-and-coming young talents to veterans
with world and Olympic level experience. They will be grouped according to
ability.

So far, a relatively small number of riders have publicly committed to
DerbyWheel. _Global Keirin_ is aware of many riders with national and
international experience planning to join DerbyWheel, with or without UCI
approval, whose identities have not yet been disclosed. Others are waiting to
see what happens, or fulfilling existing UCI commitments, before committing.

See our list of
[riders linked to DerbyWheel](https://globalkeirin.com/riders-linked-to-derbywheel/)
.

## Where will DerbyWheel races take place?

DerbyWheel CEO James Pope had indicated that DerbyWheel plans to hold races on
three continents, starting at an unnamed UK velodrome, and at Perth in western
Australia. A company
[statement in October 2025](https://globalkeirin.com/2025/10/derbywheel-will-be-implemented-new-launch-plan-promised-for-2026/)
also revealed plans to use an indoor 400m facility in Asia.

Most DerbyWheel events will _not_ be open to spectators, with fans watching
instead via broadcast channels or online. James Pope stated that ‘every single
race will be on our YouTube channel’.

However, its regular Grand Prix events are being designed to be
spectator-friendly, and are likely to take place at venues with larger seating
capacities. Speaking in February 2024, James Pope cited London (UK), Apeldoorn
(Netherlands), and Brisbane (Australia), as well as Hong Kong, the Malaysian
National Velodrome, and a new track in Chiba (Japan), as possible Grand Prix
venues.