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Annette Edmondson





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Annette Edmondson (born 12 December 1991) is an Australian former cyclist who competed on the track with Cycling Australia's High Performance Unit (HPU). She also competed on the road for the Wiggle High5 team between 2015 and 2018.

Annette Edmondson
Edmondson in 2018
Personal information
NicknameNettie
Born (1991-12-12) 12 December 1991 (age 32)
Adelaide, Australia
Height1.70 m (5 ft 7 in)
Weight65 kg (143 lb)
Team information
Current teamNorwood CC
Disciplines
  • Track
  • Road
  • RoleRider
    Rider type
    • Endurance (Track)
  • Sprinter (Road)
  • Amateur teams
    2007–Norwood CC
    2011AIS Women's Track Endurance
    Professional teams
    2012–2013Team Jayco–AIS
    2013–2014Orica–AIS
    2015–2018Wiggle–Honda
    Major wins
    Tour of Chongming Island (2013)
    Pajot Hills Classic (2017)

    Medal record

    Her greatest successes were the three gold medals she won at the UCI Track Cycling World Championships in the omnium and team pursuit,[1] a competition in which she also secured further silver medals in the omnium (2012) and team pursuit (2012 and 2013). Edmondson also competed in the London 2012 Olympics, securing a bronze medal for Australia in the women's Omnium[1] and finishing in fourth place in the Team pursuit. At the 2014 Commonwealth Games she claimed a silver in the individual pursuit and a gold in the scratch race, her first gold medal at an international level and her first Commonwealth title. In addition, she has competed at the National Track Championships with gold medal results at an elite level since 2012 in multiple disciplines.

    Early life

    edit

    Edmondson was born in Adelaide, but due to her parents' careers at Royal Dutch Shell, she spent the early part of her childhood living in Malaysia, Oman and the Netherlands. However, when she was six, the family returned to her father's native land of Australia.

    She attended the Victor Harbor Primary School, south of Adelaide, South Australia, later moving to St John's Grammar School in the Adelaide Hills where she took up numerous pursuits, including soccer and athletics.

    Career

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    When she was 13, the South Australian Sports Institute visited her school and she was identified as having the physical attributes to have a potential career in cycling. After a year in the Talent Search Program, her first major win came at the 2006 National Junior Track Championships where she won two bronze medals in the Under 17 500m Time Trial and Sprint. From that point, she began to specialise in sprint cycling and as a junior won sprint events at a National and Oceania level.

    In 2010, she took part in her first elite level National Championships finishing with silvers in the Team sprint, Keirin and 500m TT as well as a bronze in the Individual sprint.

    However, Edmondson began to lose interest in the sport and took a break from cycling. In spite of her doubt, she returned to training just four months later, but she wanted a change and therefore made the switch from sprint to endurance cycling. Eight months later, she had successfully made the switch by becoming the Australian Omnium and Scratch Race champion.

    Her first World Championships came in 2012 at the UCI World Championships in Melbourne in which she achieved silver in both the Omnium and Team Pursuit. These results helped her secure a place in the 2012 Australian Olympic Team.

    In London, she took part in two events of the Olympic Track Cycling Schedule. In the Team Pursuit, the Australian squad secured 4th place, missing out on the bronze medal. It was her performance in the 6 events of the Omnium resulted in her claiming the bronze medal.[2]

    After the Olympics, in 2013, she signed a professional road contract with Orica–AIS, in her first season with the team, she secured a major victory taking 1st overall in the Tour of Chongming Island.[3] Her and teammates took 3rd in the 2013 World Road Race Championships TTT in Florence, Italy.

    At the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, Edmondson claimed a silver in the Individual Pursuit along with fellow athlete Amy Cure who took a bronze in the event. On the 3rd day of competition (26 July 2014), Edmondson took part in the 10 km Scratch Race, where she raced to victory taking her 1st Commonwealth Games Gold Medal and again fellow athlete Amy Cure also succeeded coming out with a silver medal from the event.

    On 22 October 2014, Wiggle–Honda announced that Edmondson had signed with the team for the 2015 season,[4] where she remained until the team disbanded at the end of the 2018 season.

    Alongside her road racing, she continued to compete in track cycling. At the 2015 World Championships, she won gold in the omnium and the team pursuit.[3]

    At the 2016 Olympics, she competed in the team pursuit (the Australian team finished 5th) and the omnium (finishing in 8th).[2]

    She competed at the 2019 World Championships, winning gold in the team pursuit.[3]

    Edmondson qualified for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics. She was a member of the Women's pursuit team. The team consisting of Ashlee Ankudinoff, Georgia Baker, Annette Edmondson, Alexandra Manly, Maeve Plouffe finished fifth.[5] She also competed in the omnium and the madison events.[2]

    Edmondson retired from competition after the conclusion of the 2021 UCI Track Champions League in December of that year, having finished third in the women's endurance standings.[1]

    Personal life

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    Edmondson has had a number of high-profile relationships with fellow Australian cyclists including Michael Hepburn, Jack Bobridge and Kelland O'Brien

    Edmondson has also had an interest in charity work from a young age. Her first recognition of her work came in 2007 in which she became "Make Indigenous Poverty History Youth Ambassador for SA". Since then, she has made personal visits to deprived areas, such as parts of Indonesia to give up her time as volunteer. She is fluent in Indonesian.[6]

    Edmondson has two brothers; her younger brother Alex Edmondson is also a professional cyclist.[7]

    Major results

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    Track

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    2007
    Oceania Junior Track Championships
    1st   Sprint
    1st   Team sprint (with Chloe Hosking)
    1st   Scratch
    3rd   Keirin, Oceania Track Championships
    2008
    National Junior Track Championships
    1st   500m time trial
    1st   Sprint
    1st   Keirin
    2nd   Sprint, UCI Junior Track World Championships
    3rd Team sprint, National Track Championships
    2009
    National Junior Track Championships
    1st   Sprint
    1st   Scratch
    1st   500m time trial
    2nd Keirin
    3rd   Keirin, UCI Junior Track World Championships
    2010
    National Track Championships
    2nd Team sprint
    2nd Keirin
    2nd 500m time trial
    3rd Sprint
    2011
    National Track Championships
    1st   Omnium
    1st   Scratch
    3rd Team pursuit
    2012
    National Track Championships
    1st   Individual pursuit
    1st   Points race
    2nd Scratch
    UCI Track Cycling World Championships
    2nd   Omnium
    2nd   Team pursuit
    3rd   Omnium, Olympic Games
    2013
    Oceania Track Championships
    1st   Points race
    1st   Omnium
    2nd   Team pursuit
    National Track Championships
    1st   Omnium
    1st   Individual pursuit
    1st   Points race
    1st   Scratch
    1st 6 Giorni delle Rose Omnium
    1st Invercargill Scratch race
    UCI Track Cycling World Championships
    2nd   Team pursuit
    3rd   Individual pursuit
    3rd   Omnium
    2014
    Oceania Track Championships
    1st   Individual pursuit
    1st   Omnium
    Commonwealth Games
    1st   Scratch
    2nd   Individual pursuit
    National Track Championships
    1st   Scratch
    1st   Points race
    1st   Omnium
    1st   Madison (with Jessica Mundy)
    2nd Individual pursuit
    3rd Team pursuit
    UCI Track Cycling World Championships
    3rd   Omnium
    3rd   Team pursuit
    2015
    UCI Track Cycling World Championships
    1st   Omnium
    1st   Team pursuit
    1st   Omnium, Oceania Track Championships
    1st Omnium, South Australian Grand Prix
    1st Omnium, Super Drome Cup
    1st Madison, Austral (with Julie Leth)
    National Track Championships
    1st   Madison (with Jessica Mundy)
    2nd Individual pursuit
    2nd Team pursuit
    2016
    Oceania Track Championships
    1st   Team pursuit (with Ashlee Ankudinoff, Amy Cure and Alexandra Manly)
    1st   Madison (with Amy Cure)
    National Track Championships
    1st   Scratch[8]
    1st   Points race[8]
    2018
    Commonwealth Games
    1st   Team pursuit (with Ashlee Ankudinoff, Amy Cure and Alexandra Manly)
    3rd   Individual pursuit
    National Track Championships
    1st   Team pursuit (with Breanna Hargrave, Alexandra Manly, and Maeve Plouffe)
    2nd Madison (with Alexandra Manly)
    2019
    1st   Team pursuit, UCI Track Cycling World Championships
    2021
    3rd Endurance classification UCI Track Cycling Champions League

    Road

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    2011
    8th Road race, Oceania Road Championships
    2012
    National Road Championships
    2nd Under-23 criterium
    3rd Criterium
    8th Road race, Oceania Road Championships
    2013
    1st Overall Tour of Chongming Island
    1st Stage 3
    1st Stage 4 Belgium Tour
    3rd   Team time trial, UCI Road World Championships
    9th Dwars door de Westhoek
    2014
    1st Points classification Adelaide Tour
    2nd   Team time trial, UCI Road World Championships
    2015
    1st   Sprints classification Women's Tour Down Under
    4th RideLondon Grand Prix[9]
    7th Overall BeNe Ladies Tour
    2016
    1st Stage 2 Women's Tour Down Under[10]
    2017
    1st Pajot Hills Classic[11]
    3rd Overall BeNe Ladies Tour
    1st Prologue
    10th Overall Tour of Chongming Island
    2018
    1st Towards Zero Race Melbourne
    1st Stage 1 Women's Tour Down Under
    2019
    4th Dwars door de Westhoek
    2021
    National Road Championships
    1st   Criterium

    References

    edit
    1. ^ a b c "VN news ticker: Annette Edmondson announces retirement, Alpecin-Fenix signs Jakub Mareczko". VeloNews. 6 December 2021. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
  • ^ a b c "Annette Edmonson at Olympics.com". www.olympics.com. Retrieved 3 June 2023.
  • ^ a b c Bromhead, Nat (18 March 2022). "Annette Edmondson: Looking Back At 10 Years Of Top Level Road & Track". Bicycling Australia. Retrieved 3 June 2023.
  • ^ "Edmonson signs for Wiggle–Honda". cyclingnews.com. 22 October 2014. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  • ^ "Australian Olympic Team for Tokyo 2021". The Roar. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  • ^ "Annette Edmondson". Archived from the original on 17 December 2018. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
  • ^ "Australia's silver siblings Annette and Alex Edmondson step up at Commonwealth Games". The Daily Telegraph (Sydney). 25 July 2014. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  • ^ a b "Moolman-Pasio skips South African time trial defense due to illness, Venter claims title – Women's News Shorts". cyclingnews.com. 10 February 2016. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
  • ^ "Laura Trott misses out in RideLondon Grand Prix". Sky Sports. 1 August 2015. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
  • ^ Braverman, Jessi (17 January 2016). "Nettie Edmondson steals the show with Santos Women's Tour stage two win". cyclingnews.com. Retrieved 19 January 2016.
  • ^ "Nettie Edmondson takes powerful sprint victory in Pajot Hills Classic".
  • edit

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Annette_Edmondson&oldid=1226308698"
     



    Last edited on 29 May 2024, at 20:37  





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    This page was last edited on 29 May 2024, at 20:37 (UTC).

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