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Tunnicliffe

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13-1298: Tunnicliffe or Tunnicliff is a surname, and may refer to: Tunnicliffe [ edit ] Anna Tunnicliffe (born 1982), US sailor Billy Tunnicliffe (1920-1997), British footballer Billy Tunnicliffe (footballer, born 1864) (fl. 1864–1889), British footballer Charles Tunnicliffe (1901-1979), British painter and illustrator Colin Tunnicliffe (born 1951), British cricketer Damon G. Tunnicliff (1829-1901), American jurist Denis Tunnicliffe, Baron Tunnicliffe (born 1943), British pilot and railwayman Garry Tunnicliffe (born 1966), RAF officer Geoff Tunnicliffe (fl. 1980s – present), US-Canadian Christian evangelical leader James Tunnicliffe (born 1989), British footballer Jayne Tunnicliffe (born 1967), British actress John Tunnicliffe (1866-1948), British cricketer John Tunnicliffe (footballer) (fl. 1866 – 1892), British footballer Jordan Tunnicliffe (born 1993) British footballer Ryan Tunnicliffe (born 1992), British footballer William W. Tunnicliffe (c. 1922 – 1996), Canadian computer specialist Tunnicliff [ edit ] Jabez Tunnicliff (1809-1865), British Baptist minister and founder of

26-509: A senior. In her sophomore through senior years, Tunnicliffe was awarded women's team all American status; she earned co-ed all American status in her senior year. For every year the Quantum Sailor of the Year award (recognizing the top American college female sailor) was given, Tunnicliffe was a finalist. She was a runner up her junior year, missing 1st by 0.02 points, and won in her senior year. She

39-579: The Laser Radial single handed sailing class . In 2009 and 2011, she won the ISAF Sailing World Cup in Laser Radial . She also won the women's world championship of the snipe class in 2010, and placed second in 2008. She was named ICSA Women's College Sailor of the Year in 2005, ISAF Rolex World Sailor of the Year in 2009 and 2011, and US Sailing's Rolex Yachtswoman of the Year every year from 2008 to 2011. Tunnicliffe also competes at

52-529: The Old Dominion University to study and sail. In January 2014, Tunnicliffe announced her retirement from Olympic Sailing after 12 years of competition. She continues to pursue her professional CrossFit career. On October 23, 2017, Anna Tobias announced that she would become a team athlete in Crossfit with a team from T2Crossfit, the box she co-owns with her husband. She also qualified to compete in

65-448: The Band of Hope temperance movement Miles Tunnicliff (born 1968), British golfer John Tunnicliff (c. 1725 – 1800), US colonial figure [REDACTED] Surname list This page lists people with the surname Tunnicliffe . If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name (s) to

78-518: The Masters division (35–39) and went on to win that division at the 2018 CrossFit Games Tunnicliffe helped to bring four national championships to ODU, including the Women's National Championship and three Women's Single-Handed championships. She competed as an A division skipper for the women's team and B division skipper for the co-ed team during her junior year, and as an A division skipper for both teams as

91-1698: The Summer Olympics Sailing at the Summer Paralympics Sailing at the Youth Olympic Games Confederations ASF ASCON EUROSAF OSAF SASC World Championships Sailing World Championships Youth Sailing World Championships ISAF Offshore Team Racing World Championship ISAF Open Match Racing World Championship Para World Sailing Championships ISAF Team Racing World Championship Women's Match Racing World Championship eSailing World Championship World Cup Sailing World Cup Special events America's Cup SailGP PWA World Windsurfing Tour Star Sailors League The Ocean Race World Match Racing Tour GKA Kite World Tour Foiling Week GWA Wingfoil World Tour IWSA Racing World Tour Presidents Sir Ralph Gore (1946–1955) Sir Peter Scott (1955–1969) Beppe Croce (1969–1986) Peter Tallberg (1986–1994) Paul Henderson (1994–2004) Göran Petersson (2004–2012) Carlo Croce (2012–2016) Kim Andersen (2016–2020) Quanhai Li (2020-present) Awards World Sailor of

104-808: The highest level in CrossFit, most recently winning the 2018 CrossFit Games Masters 35–39, and competing in the individual open division at the CrossFit Games in 2013 , 2014 , 2015 , 2016 and 2017 . Her best finish was 9th overall, in 2013. She has three first-place event finishes at the Games: "The Beach" in 2014, "Sandbag 2015" in 2015, and "Rope Chipper" in 2016. On August 27, 2016, Anna Tunnicliffe married her longtime CrossFit coach Brad Tobias and changed her name to Anna Tunnicliffe Tobias. She and her husband co-own T2CrossFit in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Anna Tunnicliffe

117-458: The link. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tunnicliffe&oldid=1177983595 " Category : Surnames Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description is different from Wikidata All set index articles Anna Tunnicliffe Anna Tunnicliffe Tobias (born October 17, 1982) is an American sailor and CrossFit competitor. In 2008 she won an Olympic gold medal in

130-3370: The sport. The awards have been sponsored by Rolex since 2001. List of winners [ edit ] Year Male winner(s) Female winner(s) 1994 [REDACTED] Peter Blake [REDACTED] Robin Knox-Johnston [REDACTED] Theresa Zabell 1995 [REDACTED] Russell Coutts [REDACTED] Isabelle Autissier 1996 [REDACTED] Jochen Schümann [REDACTED] Lee Lai Shan 1997 [REDACTED] Pete Goss [REDACTED] Ruslana Taran [REDACTED] Elena Pakholchik 1998 [REDACTED] Ben Ainslie [REDACTED] Carolijn Brouwer 1999 [REDACTED] Mateusz Kusznierewicz [REDACTED] Margriet Matthijsse 2000 [REDACTED] Mark Reynolds [REDACTED] Magnus Liljedahl [REDACTED] Shirley Robertson 2001 [REDACTED] Robert Scheidt [REDACTED] Ellen MacArthur 2002 [REDACTED] Ben Ainslie [REDACTED] Sofia Bekatorou [REDACTED] Emilia Tsoulfa 2003 [REDACTED] Russell Coutts [REDACTED] Siren Sundby 2004 [REDACTED] Robert Scheidt [REDACTED] Sofia Bekatorou [REDACTED] Emilia Tsoulfa 2005 [REDACTED] Fernando Echavarri [REDACTED] Anton Paz [REDACTED] Ellen MacArthur 2006 [REDACTED] Mike Sanderson [REDACTED] Paige Railey 2007 [REDACTED] Ed Baird [REDACTED] Claire Leroy 2008 [REDACTED] Ben Ainslie [REDACTED] Alessandra Sensini 2009 [REDACTED] Torben Grael [REDACTED] Anna Tunnicliffe 2010 [REDACTED] Tom Slingsby [REDACTED] Blanca Manchon 2011 [REDACTED] Iker Martínez [REDACTED] Xabier Fernández [REDACTED] Anna Tunnicliffe 2012 [REDACTED] Ben Ainslie [REDACTED] Xu Lijia 2013 [REDACTED] Mathew Belcher [REDACTED] Jo Aleh [REDACTED] Polly Powrie 2014 [REDACTED] James Spithill [REDACTED] Martine Grael [REDACTED] Kahena Kunze 2015 [REDACTED] Peter Burling [REDACTED] Blair Tuke [REDACTED] Sarah Ayton 2016 [REDACTED] Santiago Lange [REDACTED] Hannah Mills [REDACTED] Saskia Clark 2017 [REDACTED] Peter Burling [REDACTED] Marit Bouwmeester 2018 [REDACTED] Pavlos Kontides [REDACTED] Carolijn Brouwer [REDACTED] Marie Riou 2019 [REDACTED] Marco Gradoni [REDACTED] Anne-Marie Rindom 2020 not assigned 2021 [REDACTED] Tom Slingsby [REDACTED] Hannah Mills [REDACTED] Eilidh McIntyre 2022 [REDACTED] Ruggero Tita [REDACTED] Caterina Banti 2023 [REDACTED] Tom Slingsby [REDACTED] Kirsten Neuschäfer External links [ edit ] Official website v t e World Sailing World championships in sailing Sailing at

143-588: Was at the Leiter Cup in Detroit , Michigan . Despite her small build she advanced to the Smythe Finals for her area, where she was the only woman sailing. She participated in cross country, swimming, and track at the varsity level. In her senior year she won the district track championships in the 800 meters, setting a new high school record of 2 minutes 17.56 seconds. After choosing sailing over track, she decided to go to

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156-650: Was born in Doncaster , England . Her parents owned a yacht when she was a child and introduced her to sailing . Anna moved to Perrysburg, Ohio , in the United States , with her family at the age of 12. She attended Perrysburg High School and joined the North Cape Yacht Club , racing Optimists and other small boats for the next five years. In 1999 she began sailing the Laser Radial. Her first event in this boat

169-739: Was one of three finalists for the ICSA sportsmanship trophy. Tunnicliffe was ranked 1st in the world for the women's singlehanded dinghy, the Laser Radial. ISAF World Sailor of the Year Awards From Misplaced Pages, the 💕 (Redirected from ISAF World Sailor of the Year Awards ) The World Sailor of the Year Awards were launched in 1994 by World Sailing (formerly the International Sailing Federation) to reward individual sailors for outstanding achievements in

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