Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Full name | Shanaze Danielle Reade | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Born | 23 September 1988 Crewe, Cheshire, United Kingdom |
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Height | 1.72 m (5 ft 8 in) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Weight | 76 kg (170 lb) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Team information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Current team | Sky Track Cycling | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Discipline | Bicycle Motocross (BMX) Track |
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Role | Racer | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rider type | BMX: Off Road Track: Sprinter |
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Amateur team(s) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2001–2003 2004–2005 2005–2006 2006 |
Bulldog Bikes UK Team Persil BMX SIS/Adidas Koxx Racing |
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Professional team(s) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2007–2008 2008–Present |
Redline Bicycles Team Sky+ HD |
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Medal record
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Infobox last updated on 1 August 2010 |
Shanaze Danielle Reade (born 23 September 1988 in Crewe, Cheshire, United Kingdom)[1] is a professional British Bicycle Motocross (BMX) racer and track cyclist whose prime competitive years began in 2002. She has won the UCI BMX World Championships three times.[2] Reade is the daughter of a Jamaican father and an Irish mother.[3]
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Reade began racing in 1998 at the age of 10, at Tipkinder Park in Crewe. A local track operator named Bob Field, whose son also raced at the time, became her mentor.[4] She was influenced by BMX professional racer, Jamie Staff, who was also from Crewe and raced at Reade's home track before Reade's career[5] and during its early stages. She bought her first BMX bike for £1.[6] and fell in love with the sport ever since. She was previously a Track & Field enthusiast but apparently got bored with 100 metre sprint running and the Shot Put after five years in those sports before discovering BMX.[7][8]
In 2005 she raced the National series with the men all year, despite being only 17 years old.[9][10] She commented on racing against men in a Descent World interview:
I am usually always top 3 when racing the guys. I have been racing them now for 2 years and I was almost the National Champion last year though had to settle for the No 2 spot. The boys in BMX are all cool, some spit their dummies out but I just let them get on with it! It's really quite fun to watch when I kick their booties..[11]
Reade fractured her knee two weeks before the UCI World Championships in July 2005 at a national event in England. She raced the World Championships with her knee wrapped up and on pain killers but crashed in the quarter finals.[12]
Known for her power, she developed her strength racing against boys and older amateurs, including men up to the present time. She won her first professional race in the Girls Pro at the American Bicycle Association (ABA) Winternationals in Phoenix, Arizona on 1 April 2006. She also won the following day.[13] In 2006 she became British National No.1 in 19 & Over Elite Men after racing the National series with men all year, despite being only 17 at the time, 1.72 metres tall and 76 kg.
In June 2006, Reade broke a metatarsal bone in practice. Her first race back was the 2006 European Championships where she competed only in the last two race events before the final Event. The cast came off four days before the European Championships Final Event.[14][14]
Pain, though, is nothing new, even at Reade's age. Injuries are common in this aggressive form of cycling. This is not the first time she has broken her foot and other crashes have broken an elbow and a bone at the base of her spine.[15]
She won the World Championships in Brazil in August 2006 despite an earlier injury to her foot.
Her BMX victories at junior level include three World, eight European and five British BMX championships. Reade is also a champion track racer, riding on Velodromes. In July 2007 she became the Women's Senior UCI BMX World Champion and at the 2007 UCI Track World Championships,[16] she won the gold in the women's team sprint with Victoria Pendleton. It was only her second track race ever.[17] Not only was she the first ever to win a track championship in her rookie year, she completed the feat after only six weeks of training.[18] She had originally taken up the sport to keep her fit for BMX competition.
Reade started track racing on 24 February 2007, her first ever competition on the velodrome was in the Manchester round of the 2006–2007 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics. She took second place with Anna Blyth in the Team Sprint in a time of 34.294 seconds. The Gold Medal winning Dutch team of Yvonne Hijgenaar and Willy Kanis' time was 33.966 seconds. Like Reade, Kanis is also a champion BMX racer. Reade and Blyth's qualifying time was the fastest of the event at 33.802 seconds. In the final round, the Dutch team made a false start, however, Reade didn't notice the call back to the start and completed a lap at full sprint. In an post race interview, Reade said:
"...The first run in the final (the false start) definitely took a lot out of me because I got halfway down the back straight the second time and my legs were burning bad. I could never have dreamed I'd come away with a Silver medal in my first World Cup though."[19]
A month later, on 29 March, Reade went on to take first place in Team Sprint at the UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Palma de Mallorca along with Victoria Pendleton.[20] It was also the first ever Women's Team Sprint Gold Medal title in that event. Their winning time was 33.631 seconds.[21] Reade was a last minute replacement for Anna Blyth,[22] Reade's partner at her first track racing event a month prior.
This success in Velodrome racing follows the example of the former professional BMX racer, Jamie Staff, who had a successful career both in Velodrome track racing and BMX racing. At the 2008 UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Manchester, she again won the gold in the women's team sprint with Pendleton. Reade was named one of the "Magnificent 7" by the Daily Mail in 2005,[5] and on 20 November 2007 Reade was named The Sunday Times Young Sportswoman of the Year.[23]
Reade is still active in track racing but concentrated on BMX for the event's first inclusion in the Olympic Games in 2008. Having successfully defended her crown at the 2008 world championships,[24] Reade was named the sole woman member of the United Kingdom BMX Olympic team by British Cycling on 9 July 2008.[25] She was the favourite to win the gold medal in the women's BMX event.
She crashed in the first qualifying heat time trial, but the second heat saw Reade set second fastest time. As the best of both times was counted; she advanced to the semi-finals. They were run in three heats, with riders accumulating points dependendent on placings. Despite crashing in the first heat, Reade gained enough points to put her through to the final. The final round saw Reade ride slightly more conservatively conceding the lead to Anne-Caroline Chausson on the first berm. She crashed again on the final berm when she clipped Chausson's rear wheel, conceding the chance of a medal. She did not finish the race but had she done so she would in any event, as a result of the incident which she caused, have been relegated to last place.[26][27]
On 16 March 2009, Reade was selected in the British squad for the World Track Cycling Championships in Pruszków, Poland, where she once again competed alongside Victoria Pendleton in the Women's Sprint and Team Sprint events.[28] In 2009 however Reade and Pendleton failed to retain their team crown, winning only a silver after losing out to Kaarle McCulloch and Anna Meares of Australia.[29] Reade was philosophical after this setback telling BBC Sport "I did the best possible ride I could do on the day so I'm really happy."
Union Cycliste Internationale