As a stalwart of the sprinting scene, McCulloch performed consistently at the top level over her 15-year international career. The Sydneysider won four rainbow jerseys, ten World Championship medals, Olympic bronze, three Commonwealth Games gold medals, 21 Oceania titles and 15 national crowns.
"My medals and all my achievements have been fantastic, and I will cherish them for the rest of my life," said McCulloch in an AusCycling media release. "But what I hope people remember me for is the effort that I put in. I wasn't the most talented athlete, but I was the hardest working, the most persistent.
"You'd ask me how high you want me to jump, and I'd do a little bit more."
McCulloch got into the sport through her family and was immediately hooked.
"It has always been my dream to wear the green and gold. I always thought it would be in athletics, but one day my stepdad, whose family owned a bike shop, Bates Bikes in Hurstville in Sydney, basically forced me to try the bike.
"Quite literally, in that one moment on that one day at training, I knew that I was going to be a cyclist. I was competitive straight away, my first day racing I beat everybody there, the boys included. And that was it, I knew I was going to be a cyclist.
Just three years later, in 2009, McCulloch partnered with Anna Meares to win the first of three straight team sprint world crowns, punctuated with a world record in 2011.
Further success came for McCulloch and Meares in 2010 with team sprint gold at the Commonwealth Games in Delhi. McCulloch then made her Olympic debut at the London 2012 Olympic Games and, with Meares, defeated Ukraine to win the team sprint bronze medal.
"That period from 2009 through to 2012 was pretty amazing," said McCulloch. "And it was also a big learning curve for me because we just did not lose for a long period. So, that expectation became quite great, particularly in the final six to eight months leading into the Olympics, and I put too much pressure on myself.
"But Anna and I, as a team, really were formidable. We were formidable because we were the first to training, we were the last two to leave, we dotted every 'i', we crossed every 't'.
"In terms of the best combination that you could possibly get for a team, I really think that we had everything that you could look for. And that's why we were so successful.
"I knew how hard she worked, and I didn't want to let her down, and I know that she didn't want to let me down, either."
In 2018, McCulloch fired up a home crowd in Brisbane when she claimed dual Commonwealth Games gold medals, firstly in the team sprint with Stephanie Morton, followed by the individual time trial, which she cherishes as one of her favourite career moments.
"A home Commonwealth Games, I was going in there giving everything that I possibly could," said McCulloch. "To that point, most of my success in my career had come through the team event, and I loved sharing that top step of the podium, but ultimately, I also wanted to do it on my own.
"To do it on the Gold Coast in front of my friends and family was fantastic, particularly with the pressure that I was under, also as Steph had ridden just before me and had recorded a time faster than my personal bests.
"So, I was proud to be able to win, to celebrate that and to do a victory lap on my own. I had never been able to do that before. Going out into the crowd and seeing my family was just, you know, it gives me goosebumps still to this day, and it is one of the moments that I will cherish forever."
Following Morton's retirement in 2020, which left Australia without a team sprint outfit for the Tokyo Games, McCulloch contested the keirin and sprint in her second Olympic appearance.
"I was incredibly proud of myself to see Tokyo through because I had a severe chronic back injury that I sustained in late 2019 that really derailed my Tokyo campaign," said McCulloch. "I was still dealing with daily pain leading into Tokyo, so just to get to Tokyo was an incredible achievement.
"And what I came to learn in my career over time was that success doesn't always look like a gold medal. Sometimes it is just a personal best or just fronting up and finishing something that you started."