Shannon McCurley explained

Shannon McCurley
Birth Date:26 April 1992
Birth Place:Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Discipline:Track cycling
Role:Rider
Ridertype:scratch and keirin
Show-Medals:yes

Shannon McCurley (born 26 April 1992) is an Australian-born Irish female track cyclist, who became the first Irish female to qualify for an Olympic track cycling event.

Background

McCurley was born in Melbourne. Her father was from Belfast, and her mother from Dublin, so she had the potential to participate in sport for three countries, United Kingdom, Republic of Ireland and Australia. She first visited Ireland in 2012.[1]

Career

McCurley began her sports career with running but switched to cycling after some injuries and a brief try at triathlon.

McCurley trains primarily in Melbourne, where she's based. She also trains with the Irish track cycling team in Majorca. Her coach is John Beasley.

She won the bronze medal in the under-23 scratch event at the 2011 European Track Championships (under-23 & junior). She competed in the scratch event at the 2012 UCI Track Cycling World Championships.[2]

After some injuries, McCurley switched her focus to keirin racing in 2014 to avoid quick-start sprints and to attempt to qualify for the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. She was successful and, thus, became the first Irish female to qualify for an Olympic track cycling event.[3]

Career results

2011
  • 3rd Scratch Race, UEC European U23 Track Championships
    2014
  • Irish International Track GP
  • 1st Scratch Race
  • 2nd Keirin
  • 3rd Scratch Race, BikeNZ Cup
    2015
  • South East Asian GP Track
  • 2nd Keirin
  • 2nd Keirin
  • 3rd Sprint

    References

    1. Web site: Five things you don't know about Shannon McCurley . pledgesports.org . 9 October 2018.
    2. Web site: 2012 Track Cycling World Championships: Entries list . tissottiming.com . 3 April 2012 . 1 February 2016 . MCCURLEY Shannon.
    3. Web site: Velodrome project crucial to future success of Ireland’s cyclists . Stokes . Shane . 20 April 2016 . The Irish Times . 24 April 2016.