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Rachel Atherton

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Rachel Atherton
Personal information
Full nameRachel Laura Atherton
NicknameWaynehead
Born (1987-12-06) 6 December 1987 (age 37)
 England
 United Kingdom
Height170 cm (5 ft 7 in)
Weight65 kg (143 lb)
Team information
Current teamTrek Factory Racing
DisciplineBMX & MTB
RoleRider
Rider typeDH
Professional teams
2007-2011Animal Commençal
2011-2015GT
2015-Trek Factory Racing
Major wins
DH World Champion (x4)
DH World Cup (x5 overall, 33 rounds)
DH European Champion (x2)
DH National Champion (x5)
DH Junior World Champion
Medal record
Representing  Great Britain
Women's Mountain Bike
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 2005 Livigno Junior downhill
Gold medal – first place 2008 Val Di Sol Downhill
Gold medal – first place 2013 Pietermaritzburg Downhill
Gold medal – first place 2015 Vallnord Downhill
Gold medal – first place 2016 Val di Sole Downhill
Silver medal – second place 2004 Les Gets Junior downhill
Silver medal – second place 2007 Fort William Downhill
Silver medal – second place 2011 Champery Downhill
Silver medal – second place 2014 Hafjell Downhill
Bronze medal – third place 2006 Rotorua Downhill

Rachel Laura Atherton (born 6 December 1987, near Salisbury) is a professional racing cyclist specialising in downhill mountain bike racing, and is a multiple UCI World Champion.

Atherton began riding BMX at the age of 8 and mountain biking at the age of 11. She was both Sunday Times' Sportswoman of the Year and BBC Midlands Junior Sportswoman of the Year in 2005, and then BBC Midlands Sportswoman of the Year in 2008. In October 2015, a video of Atherton overtaking 91 competitors in five minutes during a race went viral.

Career

Since 2007, Atherton has been part of the Animal Commençal race team along with brothers Dan Atherton and Gee Atherton. In 2012, Atherton, along with her brothers Dan, Gee and Marc Beaumont, signed with GT Bicycles. In 2015, Atherton and her brothers signed with Trek Bicycle Corporation to race for Trek Atherton Racing.

In June 2008 Atherton became the first British woman to win the Elite UCI Downhill World Championship, defeating second placed Sabrina Jonnier by 11.99 seconds in the final.

Atherton was involved in a collision with a pickup truck whilst on a time trial training ride with her brothers Dan and Gee in Santa Cruz, California, on 18 January 2009. She sustained a dislocated shoulder which, after later needing a nerve graft, ruled her out of the 2009 racing season, including the September World Championships in Canberra.

In September 2012, Atherton took the final World Cup round on a diverse and testing Norwegian track and clinched the overall title, despite missing the opening race of the season. The Norwegian race was the final round of a seven-round series in which Atherton claimed a win in 5 of the 6 events she raced.

In June 2016, Atherton became the first woman to win 10 consecutive rounds of the World Cup, surpassing the record previously held by Anne-Caroline Chausson. In September that same year, she also achieved the unprecedented feat of winning every round in a World Cup season.

Palmarès

2002
1st British National Mountain Biking Championships (DH) – Youth
2004
1st British National Mountain Biking Championships (DH)
2nd UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships – Junior
2005
1st UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships – Junior
1st European Mountain Bike Championships (DH)
1st British National Mountain Biking Championships (DH)
2006
1st European Mountain Bike Championships (DH)
1st Lisboa Downtown Championships
3rd Overall UCI Mountain Bike World Cup
1st Round 5 (Balneario Camboriu)
2nd British National Mountain Biking Championships
3rd UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships
2007
1st UCI Mountain Bike World Cup Round 5 (Maribor)
1st Maxxis Cup DH Round 1
1st Sea Otter Classic
1st NPS DH, Round 1
1st NPS DH, Round 3 (Moelfre)
1st NPS DH, Round 4 (Caersws)
1st Fat Face Night Race
1st Street Race, Edinburgh
2nd UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships
2nd NPS DH, Round 5 (Innerleithen)
3rd DS, Sea Otter Classic
2008
1st UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships
1st Overall UCI Mountain Bike World Cup
2nd Round 1 (Maribor, Slovenia)
1st Round 2 (Vallnord, Andorra)
3rd Round 3 (Fort William, Scotland)
1st Round 4 (Mont-Sainte-Anne, Canada)
1st Round 5 (Bromont, Canada)
2nd Round 6 (Canberra, Australia)
1st Round 7 (Schladming, Austria)
1st Maxxis Cup DH (Gouveia, Portugal)
1st Alpine Bikes Winter series DH (Scotland)
1st Canadian Open DH (Whistler, Canada)
1st Monster Energy Garbanzo Downhill (Whistler, Canada)
2010
UCI Mountain Bike World Cup (DH)
1st Round 1 (Maribor, Slovenia)
1st Round 6 (Windham, United States)
2011
2nd UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships
3rd Overall UCI Mountain Bike World Cup
2nd Round 2 (Fort William, Scotland)
2nd Round 3 (Leogang, Austria)
3rd Round 4 (Mont-Sainte-Anne, Canada)
1st Round 5 (Windham, United States)
3rd Round 7 (Val di Sole, Italy)
2012
1st British National Mountain Biking Championships (DH)
1st Overall UCI Mountain Bike World Cup
1st Round 2 (Val di Sole, Italy)
2nd Round 3 (Fort William, Scotland)
1st Round 4 (Mont-Sainte-Anne, Canada)
1st Round 5 (Windham, United States)
1st Round 6 (Val d'Isère, France)
1st Round 7 (Hafjell, Norway)
1st European Downhill Cup Round 1 (Monte Tamaro, Switzerland)
1st European Downhill Cup Round 2 (Leogang, Austria)
2nd British Downhill Series, Round 1 (Combe Sydenham, England)
2nd British Downhill Series, Round 2 (Fort William, Scotland)
2013
1st UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships
1st Overall UCI Mountain Bike World Cup (DH)
1st Round 1 (Fort William, Scotland)
1st Round 2 (Val di Sole, Italy)
1st Round 3 (Vallnord, Andorra)
2nd Round 4 (Mont-Sainte-Anne, Canada)
1st Round 5 (Hafjell, Norway)
2nd Round 6 (Leogang, Austria)
2014
2nd UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships
2nd Overall UCI Mountain Bike World Cup (DH)
2nd Round 1 (Pietermaritzburg, South Africa)
1st Round 2 (Cairns, Australia)
2nd Round 4 (Leogang, Austria)
2nd Round 5 (Mont-Sainte-Anne, Canada)
2nd Round 6 (Windham, United States)
1st Round 7 (Méribel, France)
2015
1st UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships
1st British National Mountain Biking Championships (DH)
1st Overall UCI Mountain Bike World Cup (DH)
2nd Round 1 (Lourdes, France)
1st Round 2 (Fort William, Scotland)
1st Round 3 (Leogang, Austria)
1st Round 4 (Lenzerheide, Switzerland)
1st Round 5 (Mont-Sainte-Anne, Canada)
1st Round 6 (Windham, United States)
1st Round 7 (Val di Sole, Italy)
1st British Downhill Series, Round 2 (Fort William, Scotland)
2016
1st UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships
1st British National Mountain Biking Championships (DH)
1st Overall UCI Mountain Bike World Cup (DH)
1st Round 1 (Lourdes, France)
1st Round 2 (Cairns, Australia)
1st Round 3 (Fort William, Scotland)
1st Round 4 (Leogang, Austria)
1st Round 5 (Lenzerheide, Switzerland)
1st Round 6 (Mont-Sainte-Anne, Canada)
1st Round 7 (Vallnord, Andorra)

2018
2nd place, Mercedez-Benz UCI Mountain Bike Downhill World Cup Lošinj 2018.

References

  1. "Rachel Atherton Interview". British Cycling. 16 April 2008.
  2. "Atherton awarded Young Sportswoman". Cycling News. November 2005.
  3. "Rachel wins BBC Midlands title". BBC Shropshire. 5 December 2005.
  4. "Rachel Atherton wins BBC Midlands Sportswoman of the Year!". Pinkbike. 8 December 2008.
  5. "Red Bull Foxhunt with Rachel Atherton". Red Bull. October 2015.
  6. "Atherton Racing + Trek". Pinkbike. 11 November 2015.
  7. "Gee and Rachel Atherton will remember the 21st of June 2008 for a long time". Union Cycliste Internationale. 21 June 2008.
  8. "Rachel Atherton Car Crash Accident". Pinkbike.com. 20 January 2009.
  9. "Finally! A Decision!". AnimalCommencal. 1 May 2009. Archived from the original on 5 May 2009. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  10. "World Championships, World Champion". Atherton Racing. 12 August 2009. Archived from the original on 22 August 2009. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  11. Smurthwaite, James (12 June 2016). "Leogang World Cup 2016: Rachel Atherton takes record breaking tenth consecutive win". dirtmountainbike.com. Retrieved 12 June 2016.
  12. "Rachel Atherton wins women's race: 2016 Vallnord World Cup". dirtmountainbike.com. 3 September 2016. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  13. "Atherton wins World Cup in Mont Sainte Anne". cyclingnews.com. 7 August 2016. Retrieved 31 August 2016.

External links

Laureus World Sports Award for Action Sportsperson of the Year winners
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