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Clara Brown (cyclist)

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Clara Brown
Personal information
NicknameBrownie
Born (1995-11-03) November 3, 1995 (age 28)
Portland, Maine, U.S.
Height5 ft 3 in (1.60 m)
Weight120 lb (54 kg)
Sport
Country United States
SportPara cycling
Disabilityx
Disability classC3
Event(s)Track cycling
Road cycling
ClubColorado Springs Olympic Training Center
Coached byNoah Middlestaedt
Medal record
Para cycling
Representing  United States
World Road Championships
Gold medal – first place 2022 Baie-Comeau Time trial C3
Silver medal – second place 2022 Baie-Comeau Road race C3
Bronze medal – third place 2019 Emmen Road race C3
Bronze medal – third place 2019 Emmen Time trial C3
World Track Championships
Gold medal – first place 2020 Milton Time trial
Gold medal – first place 2020 Milton Omnium
Silver medal – second place 2020 Milton Track pursuit
Silver medal – second place 2020 Milton Scratch race
Bronze medal – third place 2022 Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines Scratch race
Parapan American Games
Gold medal – first place 2019 Lima Road time trial
Gold medal – first place 2019 Lima Road race
Gold medal – first place 2019 Lima Individual pursuit
Bronze medal – third place 2019 Lima Track time trial

Clara Brown (born November 3, 1995) is an American para cyclist who competes in international level events in both track cycling and road cycling.[1][2]

Sporting career

Early beginnings

Brown was a very active young person: she was a competitive artistic gymnast, runner and skier before her freak accident in March 2008 in a gymnastics training session; she sustained an incomplete spinal cord injury when she was twelve years old where she broke two vertebrae and was paralysed from the neck down. She spent many years of spinal cord and brain injury physical rehabilitation at Shepherd Center in Atlanta which gave her excruciating pain in her left leg caused by avascular necrosis before she joined her high school rowing team as a coxswain at Falmouth High School.[3]

Discovery of para sport

She has mild hemiplegia on her left side but cannot feel anything from the neck down, she has very little motor function on her right side.

Brown bought her first modified road bike when she attended first year at University of Puget Sound to use as a means of transport and to keep fit and healthy. Her bike's modifications are the rear brake's lever is on the left due to her right hand almost paralysed, her bar end shifters are changed so that she could use her wrists to change gears. Once she graduated from college, she worked at a bike touring company and this was where she met someone who works for the Paralympic Advisory Committee and she then decided to join the United States Paralympic Committee to become a competitive para-cyclist.[4]

Her first international competition was an invitation by her then-coach to participate in the Para-cycling World Cup in 2018 at Baie-Comeau in Canada where she was third in the road race and fourth in the time trial. She went to the 2019 UCI Para-cycling Road World Championships in Emmen, Netherlands and won two of her first medals in the competition: two bronze medals then in September, she went to represent the United States at the 2019 Parapan American Games in Lima, Peru where she won two gold medals and two silver medals in both road and track cycling events.[5]

On April 17, 2021, Brown won the U.S. Paralympics Cycling Open for C3 15 km time trial in Huntsville, Alabama, qualifying her for the upcoming Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games (delayed until 2021 because of Covid-19).[6]

References

  1. ^ "Clara Brown – Team USA". United States Olympic Committee. May 26, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ "Sideline Stories: Clara Brown". Maine Sports Commission. March 17, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ Price, Karen (December 6, 2018). "Fate Leads Former Competitive Gymnast Clara Brown Down Para-cycling Path". teamusa.org/News/2018/December/06/Fate-Leads-Former-Competitive-Gymnast-Clara-Brown-Down-Para-cycling-Path. Archived from the original on August 8, 2020.
  4. ^ "After a Gymnastics Accident Left Her Paralyzed, Clara Brown Found Solace in Cycling". Bicycling. January 7, 2019.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ "Bicycle opens new avenues – and much more – to para-cyclist Clara Brown". Bicycle Colorado. February 6, 2019. Archived from the original on September 26, 2020.
  6. ^ https://www.teamusa.org/USParaCycling/Features/2021/April/17/Power-couple-Clara-Brown-and-Noah-Middlestaedt-grab-gold-on-opening-day [bare URL]