Gordon Allan Explained

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Gordon Allan
Nationality:Australian
Birth Date:3 April 1998
Country:Australia
Sport:Cycling
Disability Class:C2

Gordon Allan (born 3 April 1998) is an Australian Paralympic cyclist who won medals at World Para Track Championships. He competed at the 2020 Tokyo Paralympics and has been selected for the 2024 Paris Paralympics. [1] [2]

Personal

Allan was born 3 April 1998. Allan was born with cerebral palsy affecting his four limbs due to a loss of oxygen at birth. He attended Patrician Brothers' College, Blacktown.[3] He is studying a Bachelor of Sport and Exercise Science at Western Sydney University.[4]

Cycling

Before committing to cycling, Allan was active in athletics, swimming, and football. He represented Australia at the Football World Championship Under 19 at the 2015 CPISRA World Games.

Allan is classified as a C2 cyclist. His cycling ability was spotted at an Australian Paralympic Committee talent search day at Blacktown and he subsequently joined the Parramatta Cycling Club and commenced training at the Western Sydney Academy of Sport at Homebush. Allan took up cycling seriously in 2013. In 2016 as a 17 year old, he won the Men's Road Race and the Men's Time C2 at the Australian Championships but he was not selected for the 2016 Rio Paralympics.[3] He won the Men's Time Trial and Men's Individual Pursuit C2 at the 2019 Para Track Cycling National Championships.[5]

At the 2019 UCI Para-cycling Track World Championships in Apeldoorn, Netherlands, he won the silver medal in the Men's 1 km Time Trial C2. His time of 1min 12.873secs was a new world record but it was broken by the final competitor Alejandro Perea who just broke his new record by 0.005secs.[6] (1min12.838secs).

At the 2020 UCI Para-cycling Track World Championships, Milton, Ontario, he won the bronze medal in Men's Time Trial C2.[7]

At the 2020 Tokyo Paralympics, Allan finished fifth in the Men's time trial C1–3 and ninth together with Meg Lemon and Amanda Reid in the Mixed team sprint C1–5.[8]

At the 2022 UCI Para-cycling Track World Championships in Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, France, he won two bronze medals - Men's Time Trial C2 and Mixed Team Sprint C1-5.[9]

At the 2024 UCI Para-cycling Track World Championships in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, he won two medals - silver medal in the Men's Time Trial C2 and bronze medal in the Mixed Team Sprint C1-5. [10]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 9 July 2021. World And Paralympic Champions Feature Among Tokyo-Bound Para-Cyclists. 10 July 2021. Paralympics Australia.
  2. Web site: 2024-07-30 . Paralympics Australia Names Cycling Team For Paris 2024 Paralympics Australia . 2024-07-30 . www.paralympic.org.au . en-AU.
  3. News: Conway . Doug . Double gold for para-cyclist Gordon Allan at national para-cycling championship . 16 March 2019 . Blacktown Advocate . 15 March 2016.
  4. Web site: Athlete of the Month - December 2017. 10 July 2021. CPSARA website.
  5. Web site: National success for para cyclists in Melbourne . NSW Institute of Sport website.
  6. Web site: Allan's silver lining in time trial . Australian Cycling Team website . 16 March 2019.
  7. Web site: Australia secure eight world titles at 2020 Para-cycling Track World Championships. 3 February 2020. Cycling Australia website. https://web.archive.org/web/20200204032034/https://cycling.org.au/nat/australia-secure-eight-world-titles-2020-para-cycling-track-world-championships. 4 February 2020. 4 February 2020. dead.
  8. Web site: Gordon Allan. dead. 26 September 2021. Tokyo Paralympics Official Results. 26 September 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210926035822/https://olympics.com/tokyo-2020/paralympic-games/en/results/cycling-track/athlete-profile-n1404414-allan-gordon.htm.
  9. Web site: 21 October 2022 . Results - UCI Para-cycling Track World Championships . 22 October 2022 . UCI.
  10. Web site: 2024 UCI Paracycling Track World Championships . 2024-03-24 . paraworlds2024.veloresults.com.