Brooke Miller
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File:Brooke Miller 2009.jpg
Miller in 2009
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Personal information | |
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Full name | Brooke Miller |
Born | Huntington Beach, California, U.S. |
March 21, 1976
Height | 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)[1] |
Team information | |
Discipline | Road |
Role | Rider |
Rider type | Sprinter |
Professional team(s) | |
2003–2005 | UCSC Cycling |
2005 | Squadra Torani |
2006 | PABW Powered by TIBCO |
2007–2010 | Team TIBCO |
Major wins | |
Multiple National Champion | |
Infobox last updated on August 31, 2010 |
Brooke Miller (born March 21, 1976)[1] is an American former professional road racing cyclist and a former US national criterium and road race champion.
Biography
Brooke Miller was born in Huntington Beach, California. She did not start to cycle until she was in graduate school, she had been an elite volleyball player at the University of California at Berkeley. It was not until Miller was invited to attend the USA Cycling Women’s Talent ID camp in 2005, that she learned that women peak older than men, she then started to take cycling seriously.[2][3]
Miller became a member of the US National Team in 2007, and competed in Europe, coming second in the first stage and winning the third stage of the Tour de l'Ardèche in France. She also came third in the third stage of the Holland Ladies Tour in Denekamp.
She graduated with a PhD in Evolutionary Biology from the University of California, Santa Cruz in spring 2007,[4] and began racing full-time in 2008, although she does work as a software developer in her spare time.[1]
Following her successful racing season in 2007, Miller continued to ride for Team TIBCO in 2008, and is also the team's Marketing Director, managing "sponsor relations and strategic development, establishing and strengthening growth-oriented industry partnerships."[5]
She is the 2008 United States National Road Race and Criterium Champion. Miller won the first women's criterium to be held alongside the men's Tour of California, the race was sponsored by the Redwood Regional Breast Center.[6] She also competed in the Tour de l'Aude and the Tour of New Zealand.
Miller's ultimate goal was an Olympic gold medal, she had dreamed of this since she was a child. She began chasing her dream in volleyball before switching to cycling. However, she retired from the sport in August 2010 following the Chris Thater Memorial Classic, the official end of the women's NRC calendar.[7] Miller cited difficulty living away from home in Europe and not wanting to make the sacrifices necessary to secure her spot on the 2012 Olympic team as the main reasons behind her retirement.
Palmarès
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- 2006
- 1st Stage 2, Nature Valley Grand Prix, Cannon Falls
- 1st Stage 5, Tour de Toona, Martinsburg
- 2007
- 1st Martinez
- 1st Santa Clarita
- 2nd Stage 1, Central Valley Classic
- 2nd Indio Grand Prix
- 1st Stage 2, Nature Valley Grand Prix, Cannon Falls
- 3rd Stage 4, Nature Valley Grand Prix, Minneapolis
- 3rd Stage 6, Holland Ladies Tour, Denekamp (NED)
- 2nd Stage 1, Tour de l'Ardèche (FRA)
- 1st Stage 3, Tour de l'Ardèche, Cruas (FRA)
- 2008
- 1st United States National Road Race Championships
- 1st United States National Criterium Championships
- 1st Tour of California Women's Criterium, Santa Rosa
- 2nd Central Valley Classic, Fresno
- 2nd Stage 5, Le Tour du Grand Montréal, Mont-Saint-Hilaire (CAN)
- 2nd Liberty Classic
- 3rd Stage 1, Nature Valley Grand Prix, St. Paul Lowertown
- 1st Stage 4, Nature Valley Grand Prix, Minneapolis
- 1st Manhattan Beach GP
- 1st Davis
- 3rd Stage 2, Cascade Classic, Three Creeks Snow Park
- 1st Stage 4, Cascade Classic, Oregon
- 3rd Chicago
- 2nd Bank of America Invitational
- 1st Hanes Park Classic
- 2010
- 1st Clarendon Cup
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Official website
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External links
- Official website
- Brooke Miller at Cycling ArchivesLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).