Katherine Grainger

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Katherine Grainger
CBE
File:Katherine Grainger.jpg
Personal information
Nationality  United Kingdom
Born (1975-11-12) 12 November 1975 (age 48)
Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland
Residence Maidenhead, England
Alma mater King's College London
University of Glasgow
University of Edinburgh
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Sport
Country United Kingdom
Sport Women's rowing
Event(s) Double Sculls
College team Edinburgh University Boat Club
Club St Andrew Boat Club
Coached by Paul Thompson

Katherine Grainger CBE (born 12 November 1975 in Glasgow) is a Scottish rower, 2012 Summer Olympics gold medallist, three-time Olympic silver medalist and six-time World Champion.[1] She is currently Chancellor of Oxford Brookes University, as of March 2015.

Grainger first won silver at the Sydney Olympics in 2000 in the woman's Quadruple Sculls. In Athens in 2004 she won silver in the coxless pairs. In Beijing 2008 she won her third silver, again in the Quadruple Sculls.

Grainger has won eight medals at World Championships between 1997 and 2011. At the London Olympics 2012, Anna Watkins and Grainger broke the Olympic record as they qualified for the Double Sculls final. They then went on to win the gold medal. With four Olympic medals, Grainger shares the record as Great Britain's most decorated female Olympian with Rebecca Adlington.

Early life and education

Grainger's family moved to Netherley, Aberdeenshire. She attended Bearsden Academy.

Grainger has an Honours law degree from Edinburgh University, a Master of Philosophy degree in Medical Law from Glasgow University and a PhD in Homicide from King's College London. On 23 July 2013, Grainger was awarded a PhD in Law from King's College London (KCL) and was subsequently made a fellow at the university. She remarked "Without planning it both my Olympic career and my PhD have met at the same time and the culmination for both is 2012 – not by design."

Career

Rowing

Grainger took up rowing at the University of Edinburgh in 1993 and represents Edinburgh's St Andrew Boat Club and/or Marlow Rowing Club in rowing events. She trained on the River Dee.

She is a three-time Olympic silver medalist. She first won silver at Sydney in 2000 in the woman's quadruple sculls with Guin Batten, Gillian Lindsay and Miriam Batten losing to a German team. Four years later in Athens in 2004, She won silver again when she took part in the coxless pairs with Cath Bishop losing to Georgeta Damian and Viorica Susanu of Romania. She returned to the quadruple sculls in Beijing 2008 when she won her third silver with Annie Vernon, Debbie Flood and Frances Houghton narrowly losing to China after taking the lead for some of the race.

Grainger has also won eight medals at World Championships. The first of these was a bronze in 1997 in the eight, then a gold with Bishop in 2003, a gold in 2005 with the quadruple scull, with Houghton, Sarah Winckless, and Rebecca Romero, and in 2006 her quadruple scull were promoted to gold following a drugs test on the winning Russian crew. This quad had Debbie Flood instead of Romero, who had retired after the 2005 world championships. Another gold came in 2007, again in the quadruple sculls, with Annie Vernon replacing the injured Sarah Winckless. In 2009, having switched to the single scull after the Beijing Olympics, Grainger claimed a surprise silver at the World Championships in Poland. In 2010, Grainger teamed up with Anna Watkins in the Double Sculls and they embarked on an unbeaten season, culminating in victory in November in the World Championships in Lake Karapiro, New Zealand and then defending the title in an injury disrupted season in 2011, in Bled, Slovenia.

She has also won the Rowing World Cup in the Quadruple Sculls in 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2010 and the Double Sculls in 2010, 2011 and 2012.

On 3 August 2012 she won an Olympic gold medal at London in the double sculls with Anna Watkins.

On 14 March 2015 Grainger was part of the composite crew that won the Women's Eights Head of the River Race on the River Thames in London, setting a time of 18:58.6 for the 4 1⁄4-mile (6.8 km) Championship Course from Mortlake to Putney.[2]

Honours

She was elected President of the Edinburgh University Boat Club in 1996/97. She was elected the Edinburgh University Sports Union's female athlete of the winner (Eva Bailey Cup) in 1995/96 and 1996/97 and was inducted to the University's Sports Hall of Fame on 29 May 2008.

She was elected as Honorary President of the Scottish Amateur Rowing Association in November 2005, and a Steward of Henley Royal Regatta in 2008, only the third rower to be elected while still competing.[3]

She was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2006 Birthday Honours

She was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2013 New Year Honours for services to rowing.[4][5]

In March 2013, she became patron of the National Coastwatch Institution.[6]

On 23 July 2013, Grainger was awarded a PhD in Law from King's College London (KCL) and was subsequently made a fellow at the university.

On 20 March 2015 Grainger was welcomed as the fourth Chancellor of Oxford Brookes University in a ceremony joined by her three predecessors Shami Chakrabarti CBE, Jon Snow and Baroness Helena Kennedy QC. [7]

Charity work

Grainger is a serving board member of International Inspiration, a charity that promotes access to sport, play, and physical exercise for low and middle income families with children around the world. It is the first international development legacy initiative linked to an Olympic and Paralympic Games.[8] International Inspiration's board members include British broadcaster David Davies, former UK government minister Andrew Mitchell, and Sebastian Coe KBE.[9]

GB Rowing Team Senior Final Trials Results

  • 2015 - 2nd, Single Scull [10]
  • 2012 – 1st, Single Scull
  • 2011 – 2nd, Single Scull
  • 2004–2010 – 1st, Single Scull
  • 2001 – 1st, Double Scull
  • 1998 – 1st, Single Scull

See also

References

  1. http://www.worldrowing.com/athletes/athlete/4018/results/grainger-katherine
  2. WEHORR Results = 2015
  3. Grainger to row on in gold hunt BBC News 12 December 2008
  4. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 60367. p. 24. 29 December 2012.
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  7. Grainger and her three predecessors as Chancellor Oxford Brookes University 24 March 2015
  8. http://www.internationalinspiration.org/international-inspiration-acknowledged-historic-un-resolution
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External links

Academic offices
Preceded by Chancellor of Oxford Brookes University
2015–Present
Succeeded by
Incumbent