sport.wikisort.org - AthleteRebecca Jayne Romero, MBE (born 24 January 1980) is an English sportswoman, a former World Champion and Olympic Games silver medallist at rowing, and a former World champion and an Olympic champion track cyclist.[2][3]
Rebecca Romero
MBE At the World Championships, 2008 |
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Full name | Rebecca Romero |
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Born | (1980-01-24) 24 January 1980 (age 42) Carshalton, United Kingdom |
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Height | 1.82 m (6 ft 0 in)[1] |
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Weight | 73 kg (161 lb)[1] |
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Discipline | Track & Road |
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Role | Rider |
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Rider type | TT / Pursuit |
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Early life and education
Romero was born in Carshalton,[1] London, of an English mother and Spanish father, and brought up in Wallington, London where she attended Wallington High School for Girls.[4] Her success in rowing and cycling has meant that she was funded as a full-time athlete since graduating from university.[5]
Rowing
Romero has won world championships in both cycling and rowing; as a rower, she won a silver medal at the Athens 2004 Olympics in the quadruple sculls, and the following year was part of the British crew that won the 2005 World Championships in the quad sculls.
Suffering from a persistent back injury, Romero retired from rowing in 2006.[6]
Cycling
Romero later took up track cycling, and made rapid progress in her new sport, specialising in track endurance events.
In December 2006, Romero won a silver medal in the pursuit at the UCI Track World Cup event in Moscow – her international cycling debut – losing out to fellow Briton Wendy Houvenaghel.
Romero won her first Cycling World Championships medal in March 2007 with silver in the 3 km pursuit.[7] The following year, at the 2008 UCI Track Cycling World Championships, held in Manchester, she won the individual and, (with Houvenaghel and Joanna Rowsell), team pursuit events.
Beijing Olympics
She became the first British woman ever to compete in two different sports at the Olympic Games when she rode in the individual pursuit in Beijing. In winning the gold, she also became only the second woman of any country (after Roswitha Krause of East Germany) to win a medal in two different sports at Summer Games.[8]
Romero appeared nude on her bicycle in an advert for Powerade sports drink in the run up to the 2008 Summer Olympics.[9]
Romero was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2009 New Year Honours.[10]
Post-Beijing
Romero was expected to return to track cycling in October 2009 but did not return amid speculation that the individual pursuit would be dropped from the Olympic programme.[11] It was announced in December 2009 that the event was to be dropped, meaning Romero was unable to defend her title at the 2012 Summer Olympics. She condemned the decision to drop the event as "ludicrous" but seemed set to make a further change of events by switching to the road time trial.[12]
In August 2009 she attempted the 874-mile non-stop mixed tandem bicycle record attempt from Land's End to John O'Groats with James Cracknell but had to give up at more than half way due to a knee injury.[13]
She planned to race in a time trial at Levens, Cumbria on 13 August 2011.[14] She also raced in the British Time Trial Championships on 4 September 2011 finishing 4th overall.
In October 2011 Romero announced that she was withdrawing from British Cycling's Olympic Programme and that she would not be competing in the 2012 Olympics.[15] She subsequently confirmed that she would compete in the Ironman 70.3 triathlon in Mallorca and the Ironman UK event in Bolton in 2012[16] and the 2012 Ironman World Championship.[17]
Romero has set up Romero Performance, a sports performance consultancy organisation, which launched in January 2013.[18][19]
Achievements
Rowing
- Olympic Games
- 2004 –
Silver, Quadruple sculls (with Frances Houghton, Debbie Flood, Alison Mowbray)
- World Championships
- 2001 – 5th, Quadruple sculls
- 2002 – 5th, Quadruple sculls
- 2003 – 4th, Double sculls
- 2005 – Gold, Quadruple sculls (with Katherine Grainger, Frances Houghton, Sarah Winkless)
- U23 World Championships
- 1999 – 4th, Single sculls
- 2000 – Gold, Coxless pairs
Cycling
United Kingdom Time Trial Champion (Cycling) 2006
- UCI Track World Cups: 2 Silver Medals (Moscow & Manchester)
- 2007 World Championships – Silver, 3 km Pursuit
United Kingdom National 3 km Pursuit Champion (Cycling) 2007
- 2007–08 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics: Gold individual pursuit Copenhagen
- 2008 World Championships – Gold, 3 km Pursuit
- 2008 World Championships – Gold, Team Pursuit
- 2008 Summer Olympics
Gold, Individual Pursuit
United Kingdom 4th British National Time Trial Championships (Cycling) 2011
See also
References
External links
 Olympic Cycling Champions in Women's Individual Pursuit |
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 UCI Track Cycling World Champions – Women's individual pursuit |
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 UCI Track Cycling World Champions – Women's team pursuit |
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2000s |
- 2008: Great Britain
- 2009: Great Britain
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2010s |
- 2010: Australia
- Ashlee Ankudinoff
- Sarah Kent
- Josie Tomic
- 2011: Great Britain
- 2012: Great Britain
- 2013: Great Britain
- 2014: Great Britain
- 2015: Australia
- 2016: United States
- 2017–18: United States
- 2019: Australia
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2020s |
- 2020: United States
- 2021: Germany
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Riders in italics took part in the qualifying rounds. |
World champions – Women's quadruple sculls |
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Coxed (1974–1983) |
- 1974:
(Roswietha Reichel, Ursula Wagner, Jutta Lau, Sybille Tietze, cox Liane Weigelt)
- 1975:
(Roswietha Zobelt, Ursula Unger, Jutta Lau, Anke Grünberg, cox Liane Weigelt)
- 1977:
(Sybille Tietze, Viola Kowalschek, Petra Boesler, Sabine Gust, cox Elke Rost)
- 1978:
(Anka Bakova, Dolores Nakova, Rositsa Spasova, Rumelyana Boncheva, cox Anka Georgieva)
- 1979:
(Sybille Tietze, Christine Röpke, Jutta Lau, Roswietha Zobelt, cox Liane Buhr)
- 1981:
(Tatyana Danilova, Olga Kaspina, Yelena Khloptseva, Larisa Popova, cox Maria Zemskova-Korotkova)
- 1982:
(Larisa Popova, Yelena Khloptseva, Olga Kaspina, Tatiana Bachkatova, cox Maria Zemskova-Korotkova)
- 1983:
(Tatiana Bachkatova, Olga Kaspina, Yelena Khloptseva, Larisa Popova, cox Maria Zemskova-Korotkova)
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Coxless (1985–pres.) |
- 1985:
(Ramona Balthasar, Birgit Peter, Jutta Hampe, Kristina Mundt)
- 1986:
(Kerstin Pieloth, Birgit Peter, Kerstin Hinze, Jana Sorgers)
- 1987:
(Kerstin Pieloth, Birgit Peter, Jutta Hampe, Jana Sorgers)
- 1989:
(Kathrin Boron, Sybille Schmidt, Jutta Behrendt, Jana Thieme)
- 1990:
(Kerstin Köppen, Claudia Krüger, Sybille Schmidt, Jana Sorgers)
- 1991:
(Kerstin Köppen, Claudia Krüger, Sybille Schmidt, Jana Sorgers)
- 1993:
(Cao Mianying, Gu Xiaoli, Liu Xirong, Zhang Xiuyun)
- 1994:
(Kerstin Köppen, Kristina Mundt, Katrin Rutschow, Jana Sorgers)
- 1995:
(Kerstin Köppen, Katrin Rutschow, Jana Sorgers, Jana Thieme)
- 1997:
(Kathrin Boron, Kerstin Köppen, Manuela Lutze, Jana Thieme)
- 1998:
(Kathrin Boron, Manuela Lutze, Jana Thieme, Christiane Will)
- 1999:
(Maren Derlien, Meike Evers, Kerstin Kowalski, Manuela Lutze)
- 2001:
(Peggy Waleska, Marita Scholz, Manuela Lutze, Manja Kowalski)
- 2002:
(Peggy Waleska, Marita Scholz, Manuela Lutze, Kerstin El Qalqili-Kowalski)
- 2003:
(Jane Robinson, Dana Faletic, Kerry Hore, Amber Bradley)
- 2005:
(Rebecca Romero, Sarah Winckless, Frances Houghton, Katherine Grainger)
- 2006:
(Debbie Flood, Sarah Winckless, Frances Houghton, Katherine Grainger)
- 2007:
(Annabel Vernon, Debbie Flood, Frances Houghton, Katherine Grainger)
- 2009:
(Svitlana Spiriukhova, Tetiana Kolesnikova, Anastasiya Kozhenkova, Yana Dementyeva)
- 2010:
(Debbie Flood, Beth Rodford, Frances Houghton, Annabel Vernon)
- 2011:
(Julia Richter, Tina Manker, Stephanie Schiller, Britta Oppelt)
- 2013:
(Annekatrin Thiele, Carina Bär, Julia Richter, Britta Oppelt)
- 2014:
(Annekatrin Thiele, Carina Bär, Julia Lier, Lisa Schmidla)
- 2015:
(Amanda Elmore, Tracy Eisser, Megan Kalmoe, Olivia Coffey)
- 2017:
(Olivia van Rooijen, Inge Janssen, Sophie Souwer, Nicole Beukers)
- 2018:
(Agnieszka Kobus, Marta Wieliczko, Maria Springwald, Katarzyna Zillmann)
- 2019:
(Chen Yunxia, Zhang Ling, Lü Yang, Cui Xiaotong)
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Women's quad sculls has been an Olympic event since 1976; see Olympic champions – Women's quadruple sculls |
На других языках
- [en] Rebecca Romero
[it] Rebecca Romero
Rebecca Romero (Carshalton, 24 gennaio 1980) è una canottiera, pistard e ciclista su strada britannica, vincitrice di due medaglie olimpiche in due discipline diverse: argento nel canottaggio (4 di coppia) ad Atene e oro nel ciclismo su pista (inseguimento individuale) a Pechino.
[ru] Ромеро, Ребекка
Ребекка Джейн Ромеро (англ. Rebecca Jayne Romero; родилась 24 января 1980) — британская гребчиха и велосипедистка, серебряный призёр Олимпийских игр 2004 года в академической гребле (парные четвёрки) и чемпионка Олимпийских игр 2008 года в трековых велогонках (гонка преследования). Чемпионка мира по академической гребле 2005 года, двукратная чемпионка мира по трековым велогонкам 2008 года[4][5]. Известна не только как отличный спортсмен, но и как дипломированный специалист в области маркетинговых технологий; совмещала обучение в университете со спортивной карьерой[6]. В настоящий момент учится в Честерском университете на бакалавра по специальности «Физическая культура и диетология».
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