ANC–Halfords

[4] Some of the cyclists stopped early in the race, and Tony Capper invited guests (including his family and potential sponsors) to take their already reserved hotel rooms.

The team's period in the Tour de France and the chaos that surrounded it is captured in Wide-eyed and Legless by the British writer Jeff Connor.

[5] After ANC, Elliott rode for several continental squads including the Spanish Teka team with which in 1989 he won the points jersey in the Vuelta a España.

After racing in Europe, Elliot had a successful stint on the U.S. pro circuit which included a stage in the Tour du Pont.

After winning the 1986 Milk Race and the 1987 Kellogg's tour, McLoughlin was tipped to become the best British cyclist since Tom Simpson.

Shane became a director sportif with Team Sky where he has personally coached Bradley Wiggins and has been awarded an OBE in the 2010 birthday honours list.

Paul Watson described his experiences with ANC-Halfords, including completing six stages of the Tour de France, in an edition of the Cycling Podcast, in June 2017.

David Akam, Nigel Bloor, Bernard Chesneau, Stuart Coles, Mike Doyle, Adrian Timmis, Terry Sweeney, Chris Whorton, Steve Jones David Walsh, in his 2012 book Seven Deadly Sins, which relates his efforts to expose Lance Armstrong's use of performance-enhancing drugs and techniques, reports that one of his key witnesses, Stephen Swart, had encountered doping at ANC–Halfords, his first professional cycling team.