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Sarah Storey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British cyclist (born 1977)
"Sarah Bailey" redirects here. For the British-born American elocutionist, seeSarah Lord Bailey. For the referee, seeSarah Thomas (American football official). For the radio DJ, seeSarah Story.

Dame
Sarah Storey
DBE
Personal information
Full nameSarah Storey
Born (1977-10-26)26 October 1977 (age 48)
Manchester, England[1]
Team information
Current teamStorey Racing
DisciplineRoad
RoleRider
Amateur teams
2010–2011Horizon Fitness
2012Escentual–For Viored
2013–2015Breast Cancer Care
2017Storey Racing
2019–Storey Racing
Professional teams
2016Podium Ambition Pro Cycling
2018Storey Racing
Medal record
Representing Great Britain
Women'sswimming
Event1st2nd3rd
Paralympic Games583
IPC World Championships655
Total11138
Paralympic Games
Gold medal – first place1992 Barcelona100 m backstroke S10
Gold medal – first place1992 Barcelona200 m individual medley SM10
Gold medal – first place1996 Atlanta100 m backstroke S10
Gold medal – first place1996 Atlanta100 m breaststroke SB10
Gold medal – first place1996 Atlanta200 m individual medley SM10
Silver medal – second place1992 Barcelona400 m freestyle S10
Silver medal – second place1992 Barcelona4×100 m freestyle S7–10
Silver medal – second place1992 Barcelona4×100 m medley S7–10
Silver medal – second place1996 Atlanta400 m freestyle S10
Silver medal – second place2000 Sydney100 m backstroke S10
Silver medal – second place2000 Sydney4×100 m medley 34pts
Silver medal – second place2004 Athens100 m breaststroke SB9
Silver medal – second place2004 Athens200 m individual medley SM10
Bronze medal – third place1992 Barcelona100 m freestyle S10
Bronze medal – third place1996 Atlanta100 m freestyle S10
Bronze medal – third place2004 Athens100 m freestyle S10
IPC World Championships
Gold medal – first place1994 Malta4x100m Freestyle relay S7-S10 and 100 m Breaststroke SB10[2]
Gold medal – first place2002 Mar del Plata100 m Freestyle S10[3]
Gold medal – first place2002 Mar del Plata200 m Ind. Medley SM10[4]
Gold medal – first place2002 Mar del Plata400 m Freestyle S10[5]
Silver medal – second place1994 Malta100 m Backstroke S10[6]
Silver medal – second place1994 Malta200 m Ind. Medley SM10[7]
Silver medal – second place1994 Malta400 m Freestyle S10[8]
Silver medal – second place1998 Christchurch100 m Backstroke S10[9]
Silver medal – second place1998 Christchurch4x100 m Medley open[10]
Silver medal – second place2002 Mar del Plata100 m Backstroke S10[11]
Bronze medal – third place1994 Malta4x100 m Medley S7-10[12]
Bronze medal – third place1998 Christchurch200 m Ind. Medley SM10[13]
Bronze medal – third place1998 Christchurch400 m Freestyle S10[14]
Bronze medal – third place1998 Christchurch4x100 m Freestyle open[15]
Bronze medal – third place2002 Mar del Plata50 m Freestyle S10[16]
Women'scycling
Event1st2nd3rd
Paralympic Games1400
Para Track World Champs1823
Para Road World Champs1420
Para Euro Cycling Champs310
Total4953
Paralympic Games
Gold medal – first place2008 BeijingTime trial LC 1–2/CP 4
Gold medal – first place2012 LondonTime Trial C5
Gold medal – first place2012 LondonRoad Race C4–5
Gold medal – first place2016 Rio de JaneiroTime trial C5
Gold medal – first place2016 Rio de JaneiroRoad race C4-5
Gold medal – first place2020 TokyoTime trial C5
Gold medal – first place2020 TokyoIndividual Road Race C4–5
Gold medal – first place2024 ParisTime trial C5
Gold medal – first place2024 ParisRoad race C4–5
Road World Championships
Gold medal – first place2009 BogognoTime trial LC1[17]
Gold medal – first place2009 BogognoRoad race LC1[18]
Gold medal – first place2010 Baie-ComeauTime trial C5[19]
Gold medal – first place2010 Baie-ComeauRoad race C5[20]
Gold medal – first place2011 RoskildeTime trial C5[21]
Gold medal – first place2011 RoskildeRoad race C5[22]
Gold medal – first place2014 GreenvilleTime trial C5[23]
Gold medal – first place2014 GreenvilleRoad race C5[24]
Gold medal – first place2015 NottwilTime trial C5[25]
Gold medal – first place2015 NottwilRoad race C5[26]
Gold medal – first place2023 GlasgowTime trial C5
Gold medal – first place2023 GlasgowRoad race C5
Gold medal – first place2024 ZurichTime trial C5
Gold medal – first place2024 ZurichRoad race C5
Silver medal – second place2006 AigleTime trial[27]
Silver medal – second place2006 AigleRoad race[27]
European Championships[27]
Gold medal – first place2005 AlkmaarRoad Race[27]
Silver medal – second place2005 AlkmaarTime Trial[27]
Track cycling
Paralympic Games
Gold medal – first place2008 BeijingIndividual pursuit LC 1–2/CP 4
Gold medal – first place2012 LondonIndividual pursuit C5
Gold medal – first place2012 LondonTime Trial C4–5 500m
Gold medal – first place2016 Rio de JaneiroIndividual pursuit C5
Gold medal – first place2020 TokyoIndividual pursuit C5
Track World Championships
Gold medal – first place2006 Aigle3km Pursuit LC1
Gold medal – first place2007 Bordeaux3km Pursuit LC1[27]
Gold medal – first place2009 Manchester3km Pursuit LC1[28]
Gold medal – first place2009 Manchester500m time trial LC1[29]
Gold medal – first place2011 Montichiari500m time trial C5
Gold medal – first place2011 Montichiari4km Pursuit C5
Gold medal – first place2012 Carson500m time trial C5[30]
Gold medal – first place2012 Carson3km Pursuit C5[31]
Gold medal – first place2014 Aguascalientes3km Pursuit C5[32]
Gold medal – first place2014 AguascalientesScratch race C1-5[33]
Gold medal – first place2015 Apeldoorn500m time trial C5[34]
Gold medal – first place2015 Apeldoorn3km Pursuit C5[35]
Gold medal – first place2016 Montichiari3km Pursuit C5[36]
Gold medal – first place2020 MiltonIndividual pursuit C5
Gold medal – first place2020 MiltonScratch race C5
Gold medal – first place2020 MiltonOmnium C5
Gold medal – first place2022 Saint-Quentin-en-YvelinesIndividual pursuit C5
Silver medal – second place2016 Montichiari500m time trial C5[37]
Silver medal – second place2016 MontichiariScratch race C5[38]
Bronze medal – third place2007 Bordeaux400m time trial LC1[27]
Bronze medal – third place2014 Aguascalientes500m time trial C5[39]
Bronze medal – third place2020 Milton500m time trial C5
European Championships[27]
Gold medal – first place2005 AlkmaarIndividual Pursuit[27]
Gold medal – first place2005 Alkmaar500m time trial[27]

Dame Sarah Joanne Storey (néeBailey; born 26 October 1977) is a British cyclist and swimmer, a multiple gold medallist in theParalympic Games, and six times British (able-bodied) national track champion (2 × Pursuit, 1 × Points, 3 × Team Pursuit).

Her total of 30 Paralympic medals, including 19 gold medals, makes her the most successful (by gold medals) and most decorated (by total medals) British Paralympian of all time as well as one of the most decorated Paralympic athletes of all time.[40][41] She has the unique distinction of winning five gold medals inParalympics before turning 19.

Storey's major achievements include being a 29-time World champion (6 in swimming and 23 in cycling), a 21-time European champion (18 in swimming and 3 in cycling) and holding 75 world records.[42] She is regarded as one of the most experienced campaigners in the history of the Paralympics as she took part at the Paralympics on nine occasions between 1992 and 2024.[43]

For several years at her peak, Storey's progress was such that she was competitive at able-bodied elite level on the track, and for a period was in the Great Britain Olympic squad programme for team pursuit. She won a number of UCI Track Cycling World Cup gold medals in team pursuit in that period, and narrowly missed the (able-bodied) women's hour world record by less than 600 metres, taking the national record. She remains the current paraworld record holder in women's 3000m individual pursuit and hour record.

On 2 September 2021, she surpassedMike Kenny's 16 Paralympic gold medal record to become Great Britain's most successful Paralympic athlete of all time after securing her 17th Paralympic gold medal when she won thewomen's road race C4-5 event.[44][45]

Early life

[edit]

Storey was born Sarah Bailey inManchester[46] without a functioning left hand after her arm became entangled in theumbilical cord in the womb and the hand did not develop as normal.[47] As a schoolgirl, she was subjected to bullying by her school mates and also faced eating disorder issues at school.[48] She joined her first swimming club at the age of ten and was told by her coach that she had started her training too late to be good at anything.[49]

Swimming at the Paralympic Games

[edit]

Storey began her Paralympic career as a swimmer,[50] winning two golds, three silvers and a bronze inBarcelona in 1992 at the age of 14.

She retained her Paralympic gold medals in women's 100m backstroke and 200m individual medley events at the1996 Summer Paralympics. Despite the diagnosis ofchronic fatigue syndrome (ME), she continued to participate in swimming and claimed four silver medals and a solitary bronze in the next two Paralympic Games in 2000 and 2004 before quitting the sport.[51]

Cycling

[edit]
Storey at theOur Greatest Team Parade, in 2012.

At the 2008 Paralympic Games, her fifth, Storey won the individual pursuit – in a time that would have been in the top eight at the Olympic final[52] – and theWomen's road time trial.

Storey also competes against non-disabled athletes and won the 3 km national track pursuit championship in 2008, eight days after taking the Paralympic title,[53] and successfully defended her title in 2009.[54] In 2014, she added a third national track title with a win in the points race.[55]

Storey qualified to join theEngland team for the2010 Commonwealth Games inDelhi, where she was "the first disabled cyclist to compete for England at the Commonwealth Games", against non-disabled cyclists.[56] She was also the second Paralympic athlete overall competing for England at the Games, following archerDanielle Brown earlier in Delhi.[57]

In 2011, Storey competed for one of the three places in the GB squad for the women's team pursuit at the 2012 Olympic Games. Although she was in the winning team for theWorld Cup event in Cali, Colombia in December 2011,[58] she was informed afterwards that she was being dropped from the team pursuit squad.[59]

London's 2012 Paralympics Games saw Storey win Britain's first gold medal, in the women's individual C5 pursuit.[60][61][62] She went on to win three more gold medals, one in the Time Trial C4–5 500m,[62] one in the Individual Road Time Trial C5[62] and finally one in the Individual Road Race C4–5.[63]

In 2014, Storey and her husbandBarney Storey founded thePearl Izumi Sports Tours International women's amateur cycling team, supporting the charityBoot Out Breast Cancer. The team fielded squads in the 2014 and 2015 British road race seasons.[64][65]

Storey attempted to break the worldhour record at theLee Valley VeloPark in London on 28 February 2015. She set a distance of 45.502 km, which was 563m short ofLeontien Zijlaard-van Moorsel's 2003 overall world record – however Storey's distance did set a new world record in theC5 Paralympic cycling class as well as a new British record.[66]

In the Rio 2016 Paralympics Storey became Britain's most successful female Paralympian when she won the C5 3000m individual pursuit final.[67]

She became the first athlete to win the gold medal forGreat Britain at the 2020 Summer Paralympics when she defended her Paralympic title in thewomen's individual pursuit C5 event.[68] It was also her fifth Paralympic gold medal in track cycling and her tenth Paralympic gold medal in women's cycling. It was also her record 15th gold medal in her Paralympic career.[48] During the qualifying heat event at the 2020 Summer Paralympics she broke her own world record by four seconds in the individual pursuit C5 category.[69][70]

In 2024 she won at the Paris Paralympics her 18th Games gold medal, winning the women's road event for a fifth successive Paralympics.[71]

Personal life

[edit]

Storey married tandem pilot and coachBarney Storey in 2007.[72] She gave birth to a daughter on 30 June 2013[73][74] and a son on 14 October 2017.[74] She and her husband live inDisley, Cheshire.[75][46]

In April 2019, Storey was appointed Active Travel Commissioner for the Sheffield City Region.[76]In April 2024 Storey was elected as President of Lancashire County Cricket Club.[77]

Storey is related to the screenwriterDanny Brocklehurst.

Honours

[edit]

Storey was appointedMember of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the1998 New Year Honours "for services to Swimming for People with Disabilities".[78] Following the Beijing Games, she was appointedOfficer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the2009 New Year Honours "for services to Disabled Sport."[79] In 2012, she was awarded an honorary degree by theUniversity of Manchester.[80] Following the 2012 London Games, she was appointedDame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in the2013 New Year Honours "for services to para-cycling".[81][82]

Storey was a nominee for the 2008Laureus World Sportswoman of the Year with a Disability and the 2012BBC Sports Personality of the Year.[83] She wonThe Sunday Times Disability Sportswoman of the Year in 2020, her win being officially announced in an online ceremony.[84] Storey was a nominee for the 2024BBC Sports Personality of the Year.[85] Her name is one of those featured on the sculptureRibbons, unveiled in 2024.[86][87]

Major results

[edit]

1992

Paralympic Games
1st 100 m Backstroke
1st 200 m Individual Medley
2nd 400 m Freestyle
2nd 4x100 m Freestyle
2nd 4x100 m Medley
3rd 100 m Freestyle

1994

World Para Swimming Championships
1st 200 m Individual Medley
1st 100 m Breaststroke
2nd 100 m Backstroke
2nd 400 m Freestyle
3rd 4x100 m Medley

1996

Paralympic Games
1st 100 m Breaststroke
1st 100 m Backstroke
1st 200 m Individual Medley
2nd 400 m Freestyle
3rd 100 m Freestyle

1998

World Para Swimming Championships
2nd 100 m Backstroke
2nd 4x100 m Medley
3rd 400 m Freestyle
3rd 200 m Individual Medley
3rd 100 m Breaststroke
3rd 4x100 m Freestyle

2000

Paralympic Games
2nd 100 m Backstroke
2nd 4x100 m Medley

2002

World Para Swimming Championships
1st 100 m Freestyle
1st 400 m Freestyle
1st 200 m Individual Medley
2nd 100 m Backstroke
3rd 50 m Freestyle

2004

Paralympic Games
2nd 100 m Breaststroke
2nd 200 m Individual Medley
3rd 100 m Freestyle

2005

European Para-cycling Championships
1st Road Race
1st Individual Pursuit
1st 500m Time Trial
2nd Time Trial
European Open Para-cycling Championships
1st Road Race
1st Individual Pursuit
2nd 500m Time Trial
3rd Time Trial
National Track Championships
7th Individual Pursuit

2006

UCI Track Para-cycling World Championships
1st Individual Pursuit
3rd 500m Time Trial
National Track Championships
1st Para-cycling Individual Pursuit
3rd Individual Pursuit
7th 500m Time Trial
UCI Para-cycling Road World Championships
2nd Road Race
2nd Time Trial

2007

UCI Para-cycling Road World Championships
1st Individual Pursuit
3rd 500m Time Trial
National Road Championships
1st Para-cycling Road Race
National Track Championships
1st Para-cycling Individual Pursuit
7th 500m Time Trial
UCI Paralympic World Cup
1st Individual Pursuit
1st 500m Time Trial

2008

Paralympic Games
1st Time Trial
1st Individual Pursuit
National Track Championships
1st Individual Pursuit
UCI Paralympic World Cup
1st Individual Pursuit
3rd 500m Time Trial

2009

UCI Track Para-cycling World Championships
1st Individual Pursuit
1st 500m Time Trial
UCI Road Para-cycling World Championships
1st Road Race
1st Time Trial
UCI Masters Road Para-cycling World Championships
1st Time Trial
2nd Road Race
National Track Championships
1st Individual Pursuit
UCI Paralympic World Cup
1st Individual Pursuit
1st 500m Time Trial

2010

UCI Road Para-cycling World Championships
1st Road Race
1st Time Trial
National Track Championships
1st Team Pursuit
2nd Individual Pursuit
6thCommonwealth Games, Individual Pursuit
1st Overall 2 Days of Bedford International Stage Race
1st Stages 1 & 2
9th National Road Championships, Road Race

2011

UCI Track Para-cycling World Championships
1st Individual Pursuit
1st 500m Time Trial
UCI Road Para-cycling World Championships
1st Road Race
1st Time Trial
National Track Championships
1st Team Pursuit
4th Individual Pursuit
1st Overall 2 Days of Bedford International Stage Race
1st Mountains classification
1st Stages 1 & 2
UCI Track Cycling World Cup–Manchester
1st Team Pursuit
Sydney Road World Cup
1st Road Race
1st Time Trial
1st Blenheim Palace Time Trial Event
3rd National Road Championships, Time Trial

2012

Paralympic Games
1st Individual Pursuit
1st 500m Time Trial
1st Time Trial
1st Road Race
2012 UCI Track Para-cycling World Championships
1st Individual Pursuit
1st Time Trial
2nd Team Sprint
UCI Track Cycling World Cup–Cali
1st Team Pursuit
1st Overall Essex Giro Stage Race
1st Blenheim Palace Time Trial
1st Curlew Cup Road Race
1st Caperwry Road Race
1st Cheshire Classic Road Race
9th OverallTour du Limousin

2014

2014 UCI Track Para-cycling World Championships
1st Individual Pursuit
1st Scratch Race
3rd 500m Time Trial
2014 UCI Road Para-cycling World Championships
1st Road Race
1st Time Trial
National Track Championships
1st Points Race
2nd Team Pursuit
1st Overall Essex Giro Stage Race
1st Cheshire Classic Road Race
1st Stage 2Tour de Bretagne Feminine
3rd National Road Championships, Time Trial

2015

2015 UCI Track Para-cycling World Championships
1st Individual Pursuit
2nd 500m Time Trial
2015 UCI Road Para-cycling World Championships
1st Road Race
1st Time Trial
National Track Championships
1st Team Pursuit
1st Cheshire Classic Road Race
1st Overall National Time Trial Series
3rd National Road Championships, Time Trial
3rd Points Race, Revolution – Round 4, Glasgow

2016

Paralympic Games
1st Individual Pursuit
1st Time Trial
1st Road Race
2016 UCI Track Para-cycling World Championships
1st Individual Pursuit
2nd 500m Time Trial
2nd Scratch Race
3rd National Road Championships, Time Trial

2017

National Track Championships
3rd Team Pursuit

2019

2019 UCI Track Para-cycling World Championships
1st Individual Pursuit

2020

2019 UCI Track Para-cycling World Championships
1st Individual Pursuit
1st Scratch Race
1st Omnium

2020

Paralympic Games
1st Individual Pursuit
1st Time Trial
1st Road Race

World records

[edit]
DateDisciplineTimeEventLocationRef
14 August 20053000m Individual Pursuit (LC 1)4'01"140Alkmaar, Netherlands[88]
11 September 20063000m Individual Pursuit (LC 1)3'53"107Aigle, Switzerland[88]
12 September 20063000m Individual Pursuit (LC 1)3'51"666Aigle, Switzerland[88]
22 August 20073000m Individual Pursuit (LC 1)3'48"622Bordeaux, France[88]
10 September 20083000m Individual Pursuit (LC 1)3'36"6372008 Paralympic GamesBeijing, China[88]
7 November 20093000m Individual Pursuit (LC 1)3'34"266Manchester, Great Britain[88]
29 November 20113000m Individual Pursuit (C5)3'33"248Manchester, Great Britain[88]
30 August 20123000m Individual Pursuit (C5)3'32"1702012 Paralympic GamesLondon, Great Britain[88]
2 April 20143000m Individual Pursuit (C5)3'32"050Aguascalientes, Mexico[88]
28 February 2015Hour record (C5)45.502 kmUCI Track Cycling World CupLee Valley VeloPark,London, Great Britain[88]
8 September 20163000m Individual Pursuit (C5)3'31"3942016 Paralympic GamesRio de Janeiro, Brazil[88]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Dame Sarah Storey on Twitter (19 December 2021)"I was actually born in Manchester..."Twitter. Retrieved 22 December 2021.
  2. ^IPC Swimming World Championships 1994 – Women's 100m Breastroke SB10 International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
  3. ^IPC Swimming World Championships Mar del 2002 – Women's 100 m Freestyle S10 International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
  4. ^IPC Swimming World Championships Mar del 2002 – Women's 200 m Individual Medley SM10 International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
  5. ^IPC Swimming World Championships Mar del 2002 – Women's 400 m Freestyle S10 International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
  6. ^IPC Swimming World Championships 1994 – Women's 100m Backstroke S10 International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
  7. ^IPC Swimming World Championships 1994 – Women's 200m Individual Medley SM10 International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
  8. ^IPC Swimming World Championships 1994 – Women's 400m Freestyle S10 International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
  9. ^IPC Swimming World Championships 1998 – Women's 100 m Backstroke S10 International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
  10. ^IPC Swimming World Championships 1998 – Women's 4x100 m Medley open International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
  11. ^IPC Swimming World Championships Mar del 2002 – Women's 100 m Backstroke S10 International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
  12. ^IPC Swimming World Championships 1994 – Women's 4x100m Medley Relay S7-10 International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
  13. ^IPC Swimming World Championships 1998 – Women's 200 m Individual Medley SM10 International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
  14. ^IPC Swimming World Championships 1998 – Women's 400 m Freestyle S10 International Papic Committee (IPC).
  15. ^IPC Swimming World Championships 1998 – Women's 4x100 m Freestyle open International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
  16. ^IPC Swimming World Championships Mar del 2002 – Women's 50 m Freestyle S10 International Paralympic Committee (IPC).
  17. ^UCI Para Road World Championships 2009 – Women's Time Trial LC1 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  18. ^UCI Para Road World Championships 2009 – Women's Road Race LC1 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  19. ^UCI Para Road World Championships 2010 – Women's Time Trial C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  20. ^UCI Para Road World Championships 2010 – Women's Road Race C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  21. ^UCI Para Road World Championships 2011 – Women's Time Trial C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  22. ^UCI Para Road World Championships 2011 – Women's Road Race C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  23. ^UCI Para Road World Championships 2014 – Women's Time Trial C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  24. ^UCI Para Road World Championships 2014 – Women's Road Race C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  25. ^UCI Para Road World Championships 2015 – Women's Time Trial C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  26. ^UCI Para Road World Championships 2015 – Women's Road Race C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  27. ^abcdefghijDame Sarah Storey OBE profile British Cycling.
  28. ^UCI Para Track Cycling World Championships 2009 – Women's 3km pursuit LC1 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  29. ^UCI Para Track Cycling World Championships 2009 – Women's 500 m time trial LC1 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  30. ^UCI Para Track Cycling World Championships 2012 – Women's 500 m time trial C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  31. ^UCI Para Track Cycling World Championships 2012 – Women's 3km pursuit C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  32. ^UCI Para Track Cycling World Championships 2014 – Women's 3km pursuit C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  33. ^UCI Para Track Cycling World Championships 2014 – Women's Scratch race C1-5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  34. ^UCI Para Track Cycling World Championships 2015 – Women's 500 m time trial C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  35. ^UCI Para Track Cycling World Championships 2015 – Women's 3km pursuit C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  36. ^UCI Para Track Cycling World Championships 2016 – Women's 3km pursuit C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  37. ^UCI Para Track Cycling World Championships 2016 – Women's 500 m time trial C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  38. ^UCI Para Track Cycling World Championships 2016 – Women's Scratch race C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  39. ^UCI Para Track Cycling World Championships 2014 – Women's 500 m time trial C5 International Cycling Union (UCI).
  40. ^Ben Church (25 August 2021)."Sarah Storey wins 15th Paralympic gold medal in Tokyo".CNN. Retrieved27 August 2021.
  41. ^Whittle, Jeremy (23 August 2021)."Sarah Storey saddles up in quest to be Britain's most-decorated Paralympian | Tokyo Paralympic Games 2020".The Guardian. Retrieved27 August 2021.
  42. ^Dame Sarah Storey DBE profile Team Storey Sport.
  43. ^"Tokyo Paralympics: Dame Sarah Storey eager to make history and continue on to Paris 2024".Sky Sports. Retrieved27 August 2021.
  44. ^"Storey wins record-breaking 17th gold".BBC Sport. Retrieved2 September 2021.
  45. ^"Tokyo 2020 Paralympics: Dame Sarah Storey breaks record with 17th gold medal".Sky News. Retrieved2 September 2021.
  46. ^ab"Every little helps: Paralympic champ Sarah backs supermarket's campaign to stop families going hungry". Manchester Evening News. 4 July 2014.
  47. ^Bull, Andy (1 October 2010)."Sarah Storey: From Paralympic swimmer to Commonwealth cyclist".Guardian. London.
  48. ^ab"Dame Sarah Storey: How cyclist overcame bullying and eating disorder to become Britain's greatest female Paralympian".Sky News. Retrieved27 August 2021.
  49. ^"'I don't know if I would quite believe it'".BBC Sport. Retrieved27 August 2021.
  50. ^"Sarah Storey Pursuing More Paralympic Glory in Beijing"Archived 8 November 2009 at theWayback Machine 12 March 2008
  51. ^"Sarah Storey - Cycling, Swimming | Paralympic Athlete Profile".International Paralympic Committee. Retrieved27 August 2021.
  52. ^"2008 BRITISH RIDERS OF THE YEAR NO. 17 - Cycling Weekly". 18 December 2008.
  53. ^"Welcome to Inspirational Speakers - Inspirational Speakers".www.inspirationalspeakers.co.uk.
  54. ^"BBC SPORT - Other sport... - Cycling - Storey on top as Pendleton shines".news.bbc.co.uk. 21 October 2009.
  55. ^"National Track Championships: Four golds for Varnish & Skinner".BBC Sport. Retrieved14 December 2014.
  56. ^"InterviewSarah Storey: From Paralympic swimmer to Commonwealth cyclist",The Guardian, 1 October 2010
  57. ^"The Paralympian taking on able-bodied athletes",The Independent, 2 October 2010
  58. ^"GB trio secure gold at World Cup".BBC News.
  59. ^"Storey dropped from Olympic squad".BBC News.
  60. ^"Paralympics 2012: Sarah Storey wins third London gold".BBC Sport. Retrieved5 September 2012.
  61. ^"London Paralympics 2012 – day one: as it happened",The Guardian, 30 August 2012
  62. ^abcGallagher, Brendand (5 September 2012)."Sarah Storey claims golden hat-trick with time trial victory at Brands Hatch". London: Telegraph Media Group. Retrieved6 September 2012.
  63. ^"Sarah Storey storms to landmark 11th Paralympics gold".BBC Sport. Retrieved6 September 2012.
  64. ^"Press release: PEARL IZUMI BOOT OUT BREAST CANCER TEAM LAUNCH".Pearl Izumi. 10 March 2014. Retrieved19 June 2015.This weekend saw the official launch of the Pearl Izumi Boot out Breast Cancer team. The team, led by Sarah Storey and managed by Barney Storey is made up of nine riders and the team will be riding in the major UK events, including National Road, Time Trial and Track Championships, National Road Series, Tour Series, Ride London and the Milk Race, as well as seeking to gain invitation places in some key UCI races.
  65. ^"Dame Sarah Storey DBE".Team Storey Sport. Sarah and Barney Storey. Retrieved19 June 2015.2014 saw Sarah and Barney launch their own women's cycling team riding in aid of Boot Out Breast Cancer. The team, Pearl Izumi Sports Tours International, dominated the UK domestic racing scene in their first season and are set to ride in 2015 with an even stronger line up.
  66. ^"Sarah Storey fails in women's hour record bid at London velodrome".bbc.co.uk. 28 February 2015. Retrieved28 February 2015.
  67. ^Sport, Saj Chowdhury BBC."Rio Paralympics 2016: Dame Sarah Storey wins 12th Paralympic gold medal".BBC Sport. Retrieved9 September 2016.
  68. ^"'It's overwhelming': Storey reveals struggle after 15th Paralympic gold | Paul MacInnes".The Guardian. 25 August 2021. Retrieved27 August 2021.
  69. ^"Storey wins gold as GB claim six medals".BBC Sport. Retrieved27 August 2021.
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