Taverham's Iain Dyer is not one to rest on his laurels. Topping the medal table for the third successive Olympic Games in Rio might suggest GB's cyclists have got the beating of their rivals on the biggest stage of all.

But Dyer is adamant such success should be viewed as only the start of the journey.

The last 12 months have continued to see Britain lead from the front, finishing top of the medal table at the World Track Championships on home soil in March while they arrived back from Rio 2016 with a 12-medal haul, half of which were gold.

But while the country's success on two wheels may be the envy of many, head coach Dyer is hungry for even more, desperate to push their rivals even further into the shade for years to come.

'I really don't feel like we're there yet with British Cycling. We're setting out to create a dynasty and achieve something in world support which is unsurpassable,' said Dyer.

'We're really just taking our baby steps right now, it doesn't feel like we're there yet. Someone asked me earlier on whether it felt like I could enjoy Rio?

'It was difficult to answer that one as it just feels like it's some of our earlier steps into creating something massive that will go down in history. Simply having a successful Olympiad is nowhere near enough, we're hungry for so much more.

'It just feels like we're turning some of the earliest pages in our book right now. While Rio was enjoyable, I'm not looking at it like mission accomplished.'

While some cyclists have taken time off in the aftermath of Rio, others have been back to work on the track with European Championships and early season World Cups having already come and gone.

There has been continued success for the likes of team pursuit Olympic champion Katie Archibald who strengthened her individual aspirations with individual and omnium European titles.

Four-time Olympic champion Laura Kenny also returns to the boards this weekend for the Revolution Series and while new husband Jason has yet to make an appearance on the bike, Dyer suggested the six-time Olympic champion was turning his mind back to cycling.

The UK Coaching Awards honours sports coaches and coaching organisations that have demonstrated success over the previous 12 months. This year's winners came from 11 different sports – highlighting the very best of coaching from high performance to community, from children to disability. Find out more about coaching in the UK at www.sportscoachuk.org