Tom Bosworth

Thomas Stewart Bosworth (born 17 January 1990) is a British Olympic race walker who holds three World bests including the World Best for the 1Mile race walk, 5:31.08.

Tom Bosworth
Bosworth competing in the Men's 20km Race Walk at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro
Personal information
Birth nameThomas Stewart Bosworth
Full nameTom Bosworth
NationalityBritish
Born (1990-01-17) January 17, 1990
Sevenoaks
Height1.77 m (5 ft 10 in)
Weight56 kg (123 lb)
Websitewww.tombosworth.com
Sport
CountryEngland, United Kingdom
SportRace walking
Event(s)1mile, 3km, 5km, 10km, 20km
College teamLeeds Beckett Uni
ClubTonbridge AC
Coached byAndi Drake (Peter Selby)
Achievements and titles
Olympic finals6th
Highest world ranking2017 1Mile walk world best and 2018 3km race walk world best (indoor and outdoor)
Personal best(s)1:20:13 for 20k

He also holds six British records, won twelve British Championships gold medals, a silver Commonwealth Games medal and is a World European Olympic Games finalist.

Bosworth is currently ranked 1st overall in the UK for 20 km.

Bosworth was also selected to carry the Olympic Torch through Potternewton, Leeds.

Career

Bosworth currently trains full-time at the UK Race Walking centre in Leeds, at Leeds Met University.

He holds British records for walking 3 km, 5 km, 10 km and 20 km, with his Personal Best for 20 km at 1:19:38.

He first set the 20 km British record in Dudince, Slovakia in March 2016 to better a 20 km race walk mark set by Ian McCombie in 1988 clocking 80:41 taking 81 seconds off McCombie’s record, which was set just over a year before Bosworth was even born.

He is also the British Record Holder for the 10 km race walk, set in 2015, along with the 5000m race walk, set in Birmingham at the 2018 British indoor team trials to qualify for the World Indoor Championships.

Along with the World Record for the 1Mile race walk won at London Diamond League, 2017, Bosworth is World Record holder for the 3000m indoor race walk at IAAF Indoor Grand Prix Glasgow, 2018, and the 3000m outdoor race walk at the Muller Anniversary Games, London, 2018.

He has won six British Outdoor Championships in 2011, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018, along with six British Indoor Championships, his first in 2015 followed by 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020.

Achievements

Medals

Year Competition Event Medal
2010 National Race Walking Championships 20 km (senior men's) Gold
2011 British Championships Outdoor 20 km Gold
2012 Aviva England Athletics U23 Championships & World Trials 10 km Gold
2014 British Championships Outdoor 20 km Gold
2015 British Championships Outdoor 5 km Gold
2015 British Championships Indoor 3 km Gold
2016 British Championships Outdoor 5 km Gold
2016 British Championships Indoor 3 km Gold
2017 British Championships Outdoor 5 km Gold
2017 British Championships Indoor 3 km Gold
2018 British Championships Outdoor 5 km Gold
2018 British Championships Indoor 5 km Gold
2018 Commonwealth Games, Australia 20 km Silver
2019 British Championships Indoor 5 km Gold
2019 European Cup, Lithuania 20 km Team Silver
2020 British Championships Indoor 5 km Gold

Records held

Year Competition Event Time Record
2017 Muller Anniversary Games London 1 mile race walk 5:31.08 World record
2018 IAAF Indoor Grand Prix Glasgow 3 km 10:30.28 Indoor World Record
2018 Muller Anniversary Games London 3 km 10.43.84 Outdoor World Record
2020 British Indoor Championships 5 km 18:20.9 British Record
2020 England Athletics 10k Championships 10 km 39:10 British Record
2018 CWG Gold Coast Australia 20 km 1:19:38 British Record

Personal bests

Event Time Venue Date Notes
1 Mile race walk 5:31.08 London, United Kingdom 9 July 2017 World Best
3000 metres race walk 10:30.28 i Glasgow, United Kingdom 25 February 2018 Indoor World Best
5000 metres race walk 18:28.70 i Birmingham, United Kingdom 18 February 2018 Indoor
10 Kilometres race walk 39:36.00 Coventry, United Kingdom 1 March 2015
20 Kilometres race walk 1:19:38 Gold Coast, Australia 8 April 2018

International competitions

YearCompetitionVenuePositionEventNotes
Representing  Great Britain
2009 European Race Walking Cup (U20) Metz, France 39th 10 km walk 52:01
2011 European Race Walking Cup Olhão, Portugal 29th 20 km walk 1:32:48
2012 World Race Walking Cup Saransk, Russia 72nd 20 km walk 1:28:43
2013 European Race Walking Cup Dudince, Slovakia 31st 20 km walk 1:27:42
2014 World Race Walking Cup Taicang, China 43rd 20 km walk 1:22:53
European Championships Zurich, Switzerland 12th 20 km walk 1:23:17
2015 European Race Walking Cup Murcia, Spain 16th 20 km walk 1:23:54
World Championships Beijing, China 24th 20 km walk 1:23:58
2016 World Race Walking Cup Rome, Italy 34th 20 km walk 1:22:55
Olympic Games Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 6th 20 km walk 1:20:13
2017 European Race Walking Cup Podebrady, Czech Republic 4th 20 km walk 1:21:21
World Championships London, United Kingdom 20 km walk DQ (lifting)
2018 World Race Walking Cup Taicang, China 14th 20 km walk 1:23:54
European Championships Berlin, Germany 7th 20 km walk 1:21:31
2009 EAA Race Walking Permit Race Lugano, Switzerland 8th 10 km walk 45:29
2010 XIX Commonwealth Games Delhi, India 11th 20 km walk 1:30:44
2010 EAA Race Walking Permit Race Bedford, England 7th 20 km walk 1:28:24
2012 EAA Race Walking Permit Race Lugano, Switzerland 28th 20 km walk 1:25:49
2012 EAA Race Walking Permit Race A Coruña, Spain 13th 20 km walk 1:24:49
2013 EAA Race Walking Permit Race Podebrady, Czech Republic 14th 20 km walk 1:24:44
2014 EAA Race Walking Permit Race Lugano, Switzerland 21st 20 km walk 1:25:45
2014 EAA Race Walking Permit Race Podebrady, Czech Republic 10th 20 km walk 1:22:20
2015 EAA Race Walking Permit Race Lugano, Switzerland 4th 20 km walk 1:22:33

Media and public speaking

Bosworth has made several media appearances, including his appearance on Sky TV’s show “Game Changers”,[1] commentating for the BBC at the 2014 European Athletics Championships, and again for Eurosport at the 2015 World Athletics Championships.

Championing LGBT rights and mental health in sport alongside his athletic career, Bosworth has spoken openly about both.

Bosworth came out as gay on the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire show on 13 October 2015.[2] In the interview he explained that his family, friends and fellow sports athletes had known that he was gay for a number of years, and the coming out was to a wider audience to answer lingering questions from fans and to be himself. In the interview he told the BBC that he had been in "a really happy relationship" for the last four-and-a-half years.[3] He proposed to and was accepted by his now-fiancé, Harry Dineley on Copacabana Beach during the Rio Olympics.[4]

In 2018, he said that he was ready to risk prison to defend LGBT rights in Qatar during the 2019 World Athletics Championships.[5]

In publications by the BBC, SkySports[6] and the Telegraph among many others, Bosworth speaks about his mental health and how he overcame a period of depression. Alongside media appearances, he now also regularly visits schools and universities, to talk about his experiences as a professional athlete, LGBT equality, the importance of mental health and how sport can be of great benefit.

He has also spoken to the Culture, Media and Sport parliamentary committee, met with the Chairman of the FA to discuss homophobia in football, written piece for the Times Sport Newspaper on “drugs in sport”,[7] addressed National Governing Bodies on behalf of Sport England and spoken at Wembley for Stonewall F.C..

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.