Yvette Baker

For the synchronised swimmer, see Yvette Baker (synchronised swimmer).
Yvette Baker
Medal record
Competitor for  United Kingdom
Women's Orienteering
World Championships
1999 Inverness Short
1995 Detmold Classic
1995 Detmold Short
1993 West Point Classic
World Cup
1994 WC Overall
1992 WC Overall
European Championships
2000 Truskavets Classic
2000 Truskavets Relay
Nordic Championships
1993 Sibbo Long

Yvette Baker (born Yvette Hague, 1968) is Britain's most successful orienteer. At the 1999 World Orienteering Championships in Inverness she won the short distance event.[1]

Biography

Already at the early age of 15, she won the Elite class of the Jan Kjellstrom Trophy in 1983. The same year she was member of the British relay team at the World Orienteering Championships, making her possibly the youngest WOC participant ever.

During the following years' WOC, she always had promising qualification results in the top 10, but could not match them in the finals. It was not until 1993, when she won Britain's first world championship medal coming third over the classic distance.[1] In 1995, she stepped up by claiming both silver medals in the short and classic distances (again not matching her 1st place of the qualification). After another 1st in the qualification of 1997, finally in 1999 she took the crown by becoming World Orienteering Champion in the short distance event. In 2001, after a winning her fourth consecutive qualification (1995/97/99/01), she retired from the WOC with an 11th place in the long distance event. Between 1983 and 2001, she took part in all 11 WOC.

Baker also represented England at mountain running[2] and was a successful fell runner, winning races including the Edale Skyline, Duddon Valley, the Three Shires and the Langdale Horseshoe.[3]

She was born in the U.S. to British parents. She grew up in England and then lived for several years in Denmark before moving to New Zealand.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Profile: Yvette (Hague) Baker". Retrieved 2008-06-15.
  2. Sarah Rowell, Off-Road Running (Ramsbury, 2002), 123-25.
  3. Graham Breeze, “Equi ad Circos (Classic Fell Races Part 3)”, The Fellrunner Magazine, Feb 2003, 24-26.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 13, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.