Crawford Carrick-Anderson

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Crawford Carrick-Anderson (born 1970) is a Scottish former World Cup downhill mountainbiker and skier.[1] He is profoundly deaf.[2]

As a professional cyclist he raced UCI Downhill World Cups for the Giant factory team,[3] competed in the UCI Mountain Bike World Championships – classifying 9th overall in 1999 and 13th in 2002[4][5] – finished in 2nd (1999) and 3rd (2000) in the British National Mountain Biking Championships Downhill discipline, and was Scottish champion five times.[6] After retiring in 2005 he continued to compete strongly at national age-group levels in other off-road disciplines such as Enduro and Cyclo-cross.[5][7] His children are also active in the sport;[8] son Corran competed in the UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships in 2020 and 2021 in the Junior Cross-Country and Team relay events.

Originally from Dunblane, Carrick-Anderson learned to ski in the Cairngorms and became the Scottish Junior Champion in slalom skiing. He subsequently spent six years on the British Ski Team, and claimed medals in the sport in several editions of the Winter Deaflympics.[9] By the time he quit skiing at the age of 23, he was Britain's highest ranked Slalom Skier.[2] His younger sister Emma[10] represented Great Britain as an alpine skier at four Winter Olympic Games.

Carrick-Anderson purchased his first trials motorbike at the age of 12, and competed at National and International level.[2][6] Away from sport, he works as a sign maker and printer, based in Peebles.[11]

References

  1. ^ Moore, Richard (25 May 2003). "Alive: Downhill all the way to the top". The Sunday Times. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Clark, Ron (5 April 1997). "No easy ride in the trials of life". The Herald (Glasgow). Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  3. ^ "Giant Toyota riders".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ "August 29–31 - Downhill - Vouilloz vaults to victory in men's DH for 10th World Title - Chausson crushes women again to gain 7th World Crown". cyclingnews.com. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  5. ^ a b Crawford Carrick-Anderson, Roots and Rain
  6. ^ a b Crawford Carrick-Anderson, Scottish Enduros, 2005
  7. ^ 1x10: Crawford Carrick Anderson, Scottish Cyclocross, 6 November 2017
  8. ^ Future cycling stars saddle up alongside world champions, Peeblesshire News, 6 June 2014
  9. ^ Crawford Carrick-Anderson, International Committee of Sports for the Deaf. Retrieved 28 November 2021
  10. ^ A dedication to excellence; close-up; Emma Carrick-Anderson, Andrew Baker, The Independent, 11 February 1996
  11. ^ Couple sell superhero stickers to help NHS Borders, Border Telegraph, 7 May 2020