Tara Whitten
- Track
- Road
Representing Canada | ||
---|---|---|
Women's track cycling | ||
Summer Olympics | ||
2012 London | Team pursuit | |
World Championship | ||
2010 Ballerup | Omnium | |
2010 Ballerup | Points race | |
2011 Apeldoorn | Omnium | |
2009 Pruszków | Omnium | |
2012 Melbourne | Team pursuit | |
Pan American Road and Track Championships | ||
2009 Mexico | Omnium | |
2009 Mexico | Individual pursuit | |
2009 Mexico | Team sprint | |
2015 Puebla | Individual time trial | |
2009 Mexico | Individual time trial | |
2009 Mexico | Points race | |
2009 Mexico | Team pursuit | |
Women's cross-country skiing | ||
U23 World Championships | ||
2003 Valdidentro | Individual sprint |
Tara Alice Whitten (born 13 July 1980) is a Canadian former racing cyclist.[1]
Career
A former cross-country skier from Edmonton, Alberta, Whitten began track racing seriously in 2008 having dabbled in it since 2005.[2] The same year she won the points race and individual pursuit at the Canadian National Track Championships, and also took the bronze medal in the scratch race and 500 meter time trial events.
Whitten began the 2008–2009 track cycling season strongly, winning two silver medals at first round of the Track World Cup in Manchester, United Kingdom, in October. She went on to take two bronze medals in the third round in Cali, Colombia, and a further two silver medals in the fifth and final round in Copenhagen, Denmark, in February 2009.
In March 2009, Whitten won the silver medal in the Omnium at the 2009 UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Pruszków, the first time the event was included in the championships.[2]
In December 2009, Whitten rode on the team that won the gold medal in the 2010 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics Women's Team Pursuit in Cali, Colombia, along with fellow Canadian National Team members Laura Brown and Stephanie Roorda, concurrently setting a new Canadian National Record in this event as well with a time of 3:27.289. Of note, the Women's Team Pursuit has been added as an Olympic event for 2012. She also won two silver medals, in the Individual Pursuit (time of 3:34.547) and Points Race.
In March 2010, Whitten won the gold medal in the Omnium and Points race at the 2010 UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Ballerup.
At the 2012 Summer Olympics, she was part of the Canadian team that won the bronze medal in the women's team pursuit.[3] She finished fourth in the omnium.[4][5]
In March 2016 Whitten was injured in Rio de Janeiro during a visit to inspect the road course for the 2016 Summer Olympics, running her bike into the back of a bus and being knocked unconscious and breaking a bone in the base of her skull. The interruption to her training delayed her qualifying for the Olympics,[5] but she was officially named to Canada's 2016 Olympic team.[6]
Personal life
Whitten was awarded a PhD in neuroscience from the University of Alberta on 10 June 2016, having first earned a science degree in 2006 and been accepted into an electrophysiology lab as a master's student in 2007, while taking periodic breaks from her studies to focus on cycling full-time. She began a post-doctoral fellowship in concussion research at the University of Calgary in fall 2016.[5]
Major results
Track
- 2008
- National Track Championships
- 1st Individual pursuit
- 1st Points race
- 3rd 500m time trial
- 3rd Scratch
- 2008–09 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics
- 2nd Individual pursuit, Manchester
- 2nd Scratch, Manchester
- 3rd Individual pursuit, Cali
- 3rd Points race, Cali
- 2009
- 2009–10 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics, Cali
- 1st Team pursuit
- 2nd Individual pursuit
- 2nd Points race
- 2nd Omnium, UCI Track Cycling World Championships
- 2nd Individual pursuit, 2008–09 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics, Copenhagen
- 2010
- UCI Track Cycling World Championships
- 1st Omnium
- 1st Points race
- Omnium, 2010–11 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics
- 2nd Melbourne
- 2nd Cali
- Commonwealth Games
- 3rd Individual pursuit
- 3rd Points race
- 3rd Team sprint
- 2009–10 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics, Beijing
- 3rd Individual pursuit
- 3rd Team pursuit
- 2011
- 1st Omnium, UCI Track Cycling World Championships
- 1st Overall, Omnium, 2010–11 UCI Track Cycling World Ranking
- 2010–11 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics, Beijing
- 1st Omnium
- 2nd Team pursuit
- 2nd Omnium, 2011–12 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, Cali
- 2012
- 2nd Team pursuit, 2011–12 UCI Track Cycling World Cup, London
- 3rd Team pursuit, Summer Olympics
- 3rd Team pursuit, UCI Track Cycling World Championships
Road
- 2009
- 1st Time trial, National Road Championships
- 8th Time trial, UCI Road World Championships
- 2010
- Commonwealth Games
- 1st Time trial
- 7th Road race
- National Road Championships
- 2nd Road race
- 3rd Time trial
- 6th Chrono Gatineau
- 7th Time trial, UCI Road World Championships
- 9th Grand Prix Cycliste de Gatineau
- 2011
- 2nd Time trial, National Road Championships
- 4th Time trial, UCI Road World Championships
- 6th Chrono Champenois
- 2012
- 4th Chrono Gatineau
- 2015
- 2nd Time trial, Pan American Road Championships
- 8th Overall Joe Martin Stage Race
- 8th Chrono Gatineau
- 2016
- 1st Time trial, National Road Championships
- 1st Overall Cascade Cycling Classic
- 1st Mountains classification
- 1st Stages 2 (ITT) & 5
- 2nd Chrono Gatineau
- 7th Time trial, Summer Olympics
References
- ^ Tara Whitten at Cycling Archives
- ^ a b "Track World Championships - Silver Medal for Tara Whitten". Canadian Cycling Association. 28 March 2009. Archived from the original on 8 July 2011.
- ^ "London 2012 - Track Cycling - Women's Team Pursuit". olympic.org. IOC. Retrieved 22 December 2014.
- ^ "London 2012 - Track Cycling - Omnium Women". olympic.org. IOC. Retrieved 14 June 2016.
- ^ a b c Brown, Michael (13 June 2016). "There and back again: from the Olympic podium to the convocation stage". University of Alberta: News & Events. University of Alberta. Retrieved 14 June 2016.
- ^ Tozer, Jamie (29 June 2016). "Returning Olympians highlight Canada's cycling team". olympic.ca. Canadian Olympic Committee. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
External links
- Tara Whitten at UCI
- Tara Whitten at Cycling Archives
- Tara Whitten at ProCyclingStats
- Tara Whitten at FIS (cross-country)
- Tara Whitten at Olympics.com
- v
- t
- e
- 1988: Sally Hodge
- 1989: Jeannie Longo
- 1990: Karen Holliday
- 1991–94: Ingrid Haringa
- 1995–96: Svetlana Samokhvalova
- 1997: Natalya Karimova
- 1998: Teodora Ruano
- 1999–2000: Marion Clignet
- 2001–03: Olga Slyusareva
- 2003: Oksana Grishina
- 2004: Olga Slyusareva
- 2005–06: Vera Carrara
- 2007: Katherine Bates
- 2008: Marianne Vos
- 2009: Giorgia Bronzini
- 2010: Tara Whitten
- 2011: Tatsiana Sharakova
- 2012: Anastasia Chulkova
- 2013: Jarmila Machačová
- 2014: Amy Cure
- 2015: Stephanie Gaumnitz
- 2016: Katarzyna Pawłowska
- 2017: Elinor Barker
- 2018: Kirsten Wild
- 2019: Alexandra Manly
- 2020: Elinor Barker
- 2021: Lotte Kopecky
- 2022: Neah Evans
- 2023: Lotte Kopecky