Yvette Baker (born Yvette Hague, 1968) is Britain's most successful orienteer. At the 1999 World Orienteering Championships (WOC) in Inverness she won the short distance event.[1]
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Women's orienteering | ||
Representing Great Britain | ||
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 |
Orienteering
editAlready at the early age of 15, she won the Elite class of the Jan Kjellstrom Trophy in 1983. The same year she was a member of the British relay team at the World Orienteering Championships, making her possibly the youngest WOC participant ever.[citation needed]
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 won silver medals in the short and classic distances, again not matching her 1st place of the qualification. After another 1st place in the qualification of 1997, in 1999 she won the short distance event to become World Orienteering Champion. In 2001, after a winning her fourth consecutive qualification (1995/97/99/2001), 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.[citation needed]
In domestic competition, she won both the British Orienteering Championships and the JK Orienteering Festival multiple times.
The annual Yvette Baker Trophy and Shield inter-club junior orienteering competition in the UK is named for her.[2]
Fell running
editBaker represented England at mountain running[3] and was a successful fell runner, winning races including the Edale Skyline, Duddon Valley, the Three Shires, the Langdale Horseshoe and the Carnethy 5.[4]
Personal life
editShe 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. She attended the University of Edinburgh and was a member of Edinburgh University Orienteering Club; she was inducted into the Edinburgh University Hall of Fame in 2011.[citation needed]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "Profile: Yvette (Hague) Baker". Retrieved 15 June 2008.
- ^ "British Orienteering". www.britishorienteering.org.uk. Retrieved 25 July 2023.
- ^ Sarah Rowell, Off-Road Running (Ramsbury, 2002), 123-25.
- ^ Graham Breeze, "Equi ad Circos (Classic Fell Races Part 3)", The Fellrunner Magazine, Feb 2003, 24-26; Carnethy Hill Runners: Carnethy 5 Results Summary.
External links
edit- Article about Yvettes WOC history
- Yvette Baker at World of O