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Sharon Laws

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Full name
  
Sharon Laws

Height
  
1.64 m

Discipline
  
Road & MTB

2013
  
Lotto Belisol Ladies

Weight
  
54 kg

2008–2009
  
Name
  
Sharon Laws

2010–2011
  
Garmin–Cervelo

Role
  
Cyclist


Sharon Laws assetssbnationcomassets606364DSC0052jpg

Born
  
7 July 1974 (age 49) Nairobi, Kenya (
1974-07-07
)

Current team
  
Bigla Pro Cycling Team

2014 tour of the gila mara abbott sharon laws


Sharon Laws (born 7 July 1974) is a British former professional cyclist, who currently works as an environmental consultant.

Contents

Sharon Laws Sharon Laws Professional cyclist

Sharon laws top 8 facts


Early life

Sharon Laws Interview Sharon Laws recovering from that crash Total

Laws was born in Nairobi, Kenya, grew up in Bourton-on-the-Water, Gloucestershire and has lived in Uganda, South Africa, Zimbabwe and the UK.

Sharon Laws Sharon Laws Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

She gained an MSc in conservation and worked both before and during her cycling career as an environmental consultant to organisations including the British Government, the United Nations and for mining company Rio Tinto in Australia.

Cycling career

Sharon Laws Sharon Laws on track with Britain for Beijing 2008

Laws previously competed in adventure racing and endurance mountain biking. She won the eight-day Absa Cape Epic mountain-bike race in South Africa in 2004 with partner Hanlie Booyens. She then competed again with Booyens in the Women's Category in 2009, once again claiming 1st prize.

She began riding on the road to train for mountain biking and her form on the road was confirmed when she moved to Australia. She was approached to ride for Australia after coming second in the national championship in Ballarat, but the British official, Dave Brailsford, signed her for Team Halfords Bikehut. After turning professional at the age of 33, she made her base Girona, Spain, and undertook winter training in Stellenbosch, South Africa.

Her first victory in the team came was the Cheshire Classic stage race, which she won after coming second on the first and second stages. She got in the break on the first day in the Tour de l'Aude Cycliste Féminin but eased up on team orders to let Nicole Cooke catch the leaders. Cooke won the stage with Laws fifth. Laws crashed on the fifth stage but rejoined the peloton after a long chase. Her elbow needed a stitch but she could continue racing. She finished sixth overall.

Her addition to the British team, which included Cooke and Emma Pooley, was expected to improve chances of a medal in the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing but Laws crashed twice and came 35th of 62 finishers. Later in 2008 she won the British National Time Trial Championships.

In 2012, she won the British National Road Race Championships.

In October 2015 she was announced as part of Podium Ambition Pro Cycling's squad for the 2016 season. Subsequently, in June 2016 she confirmed that she would retire from competition at the end of the season.

Laws was part of the ITV4 commentary team for the channel's coverage of the 2017 Women's Tour.

Personal life

Laws retired from professional cycling in August 2016. In October 2016 Laws announced that she had been diagnosed with cervical cancer, for which she had started on a six-month course of chemotherapy.

The legacy of sharon laws


References

Sharon Laws Wikipedia