The 2023 UCI World Championships in Glasgow will, for the first time, feature all cycling disciplines and include paracycling events. Taking advantage of this integration, Dame Sarah Storey is hoping to challenge for selection for the women’s time trial as well as the events she usually aims for in paracycling, as she sets her goals recovering from serious injury.
“I crashed during the Road World Cup road race when another rider deviated from their line and directly across my front wheel,” she said, talking about her long-term goals.
“This left me with concussion symptoms, broken ribs and a partially collapsed lung.”
“I’ve just got back from a training camp where I built back up to normal levels of training and intensity. I have been progressing ahead of schedule and there should not be any long-term damage.”
Storey will make her return to racing at the Curlew Cup in Northumberland on 9th October, in a race rescheduled from September following the death of Queen Elizabeth II. This will form the first part of a long-term plan that will culminate in the 2023 World Championships and the 2024 Olympic Games.
Another stepping stone along the way to these goals will be the ParaCycling Track World Championships in Paris in October, with selection confirmed in the next month.
“After that there will be a brief off-season break before starting the buildup to Glasgow 2023,” Storey said, confirming her hopes of targeting selection in both teams.
In her long, glittering career, Storey has so far accumulated 29 world titles and 17 Paralympic gold medals, including three in Tokyo in the individual pursuit, road time trial and road race.
“Selection for my ninth Paralympic Games in Paris is the current big aim of this Paralympic cycle, it’s a very different process compared to previous Games because it is only three years in length,” she pointed out.
“It would be amazing to be able to get to Paris and see whether I am able to defend the titles won in the previous Games.”
Alongside racing, Storey has established the team Storey Racing, and the Skoda DSI Academy which offers a year-long programme for female cyclists, aged between 18-24, providing a clear direction within the sport so that they can maximise their potential.
Now in its fourth year, the Academy’s graduates are beginning to build their own cycling careers.
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