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Leon Taylor

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Full name
  
Leon Taylor

Height
  
1.78 m

Country
  
Great Britain

Partner
  

Name
  
Leon Taylor

Retired
  
May 29, 2008

Role
  
Diver

TV shows
  
Splash!

Leon Taylor Splash Joey Essex quizzes Olympic medallist Leon Taylor


Born
  
November 2, 1977 (age 46) (
1977-11-02
)
Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England

Residence
  
Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England

Event(s)
  
10 m platform,10 m synchro

Books
  
Mentor: The Most Important Role You Were Never Trained For

Similar People
  
Peter Waterfield, Mathew Helm, Robert Newbery, Yang Jinghui, Tian Liang

Video diary 20 tom daley leon taylor diving bbc


Leon Taylor (born 2 November 1977) is a British former competitive diver. Following his retirement from competition, Taylor transitioned to the commentary booth, where he works for the BBC.

Contents

Leon Taylor BBC SPORT Olympics Diving Diver Taylor announces

Leon taylor peter waterfield synchro athens dive 5 wmv


Background

Leon Taylor Leon Taylor Biography amp Images

Taylor was born and educated in Cheltenham where he attended Bournside School. He was hyperactive as a child and his parents were advised to channel his energies and enthusiasm into sport. He was a swimmer and gymnast from the age of two and took up competitive diving when he was eight. By the age of 11 he was a national champion. He trained at Cheltenham Leisure Centre under Dave Turner and then Ian Barr until 1996. He was a mentor to Cheltenham Diving Club youngster, Daniel McGlone, who in hand became National Champion aged just 9 years old. McGlone went on to win multiple National and International events and was one of the first divers in Great Britain to attain a position on the Junior Olympic Programme, at only 13 years old.

Diving career

Leon Taylor httpsaquaticregisterfileswordpresscom20130

Taylor represented Great Britain at three Summer Olympic Games and was a member of the Great Britain team for 16 years winning medals at all major international championships. In the diving events at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, he won the Silver medal in the men's synchronised 10-metre platform, with partner Peter Waterfield. It was Britain's first Olympic diving medal since Brian Phelps in 1960. He had come fourth in the same competition in the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney.

Leon Taylor Leon Taylor LeonTaylorGB Twitter

Other achievements include Silver in the men's 10 m platform at the 2002 Commonwealth Games (he had won Bronze in 1998), and Bronze in the 10 m synchro at the 1999 European Aquatics Championships. At a national level, Taylor held both the 10 m platform and 10 m synchro titles from 1994 to 2006.

Leon Taylor Olympic Diver Leon Taylor wishes Team GB good luck for

He trained with other members of the British team in the Ponds Forge swimming complex in Sheffield.

In 1998 Leon invented the 5255b; a back 2.5 somersaults, 2.5 twists which at the time was the World's most difficult dive with a tariff of 3.8. Following a rule change in 2009, the dive now carries a tariff of 3.6.

Retirement and post-competitive career

Although Taylor had been planning to compete at the 2008 Summer Olympics, he announced his retirement from competition in May of that year following a number of injuries.

Between 2006 – 2008, he also completed an HNC (Higher National Certificate) Business and Finance from Sheffield Hallam University.

Taylor now works as a public speaker, presenter, conference host, BBC commentator and mentor to members of the British team.

In 2010 Taylor published a book on the subject of mentoring: MENTOR - The most important role you were never trained for.

In January 2013, Taylor was named as a judge on the ITV celebrity diving show Splash!. He returned to judge on the show in its second series, airing in 2014. Taylor had planned, and booked, a once in a lifetime trip to New Zealand with his girlfriend when 'Splash' came about instead.

In 2016 Taylor was part of the BBC commentary team for the diving events at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio and for the 2017 World Aquatics Championships.

References

Leon Taylor Wikipedia


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