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Bryony Page
Full name Bryony Kate Frances Page
Born (1990-12-10) 10 December 1990 (age 33)
Crewe, Cheshire, England
Residence Sheffield, England
Height 5 ft 8 in (173 cm)
Weight 136 lb (62 kg)
Discipline Trampoline gymnastics
Level Senior International Elite
Years on national team 7
Club Sheffield Trampolining Academy
Head coach(es) Paul Greaves
World ranking 13
Medal record
Women's trampoline gymnastics
Representing  Great Britain
Olympic Games
Silver 2016 Rio de Janeiro Individual
Bronze 2020 Tokyo Individual
World Championships
Gold 2023 Birmingham Individual
Gold 2021 Baku Individual
Gold 2013 Sofia Team
Gold 2022 Sofia All-around Team
Silver 2011 Birmingham Team
Silver 2019 Tokyo Team
Silver 2022 Sofia Individual
Silver 2022 Sofia Team
Bronze 2023 Birmingham Synchronized
Bronze 2023 Birmingham All-around Team
Bronze 2021 Baku All-around Team
Last updated on: 19 November 2022.

Bryony Kate Frances Page (born 10 December 1990) is a British individual trampoline gymnast. She is the 2021 and 2023 women's individual trampoline world champion, and part of the British team that won team gold at the 2013 world championships, and all-around team gold in 2022.

Page became the first British trampolinist to win an Olympic medal at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, when she won the silver medal. Five years later, at the delayed 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo she once more reached the podium winning a bronze medal. In doing so she became the first British female gymnast in any gymnastic discipline to win medals across two or more Games.

Early life and education

Page was born in Crewe and brought up in Wrenbury, near Nantwich. She attended Brine Leas School and Malbank School and Sixth Form College. She took up trampolining at the age of nine.

Page studied biology at the University of Sheffield, where she received a sports scholarship. She graduated in 2015 with a first-class honours degree, with her dissertation being a study of sounds made by dinosaurs. After graduating she concentrated full-time on trampolining.

Career

Early in her career Page struggled with the yips (a loss of fine motor skills in athletes) for two years which affected her confidence and performance, but she overcame it in 2010 with the help of a confidence coach. She competed in her first World Championships in 2010, where she finished fourth in the individual event. At the 2011 World Championships she was part of the team that won the silver medal in the team event. She missed the 2012 Olympic Games in London due to illness and injury problems, but won the individual gold medal at the 2012 World Cup in Sofia.

She won three successive British Championship titles between 2013 and 2015, and was a member of the British teams that won gold at the 2013 World Championships, and the 2014 and 2016 European Championships. She finished fifth in the individual event at the 2015 World Championships.

At the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Page and her British teammate Kat Driscoll became Great Britain's first ever finalists in trampolining, with Page qualifying in seventh position. During the final she posted a score of 56.040 which put her in the lead, until defending champion Rosie MacLennan scored 56.465 dropping Page into the second place. Page won the silver medal, the first time that any British trampolinist had won an Olympic medal. At the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo, held in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Page won a bronze medal. Later that year, Page won individual gold and was part of the team that won bronze in the team event at the 2021 World Championships.

Awards and honours

She was awarded an honorary doctorate from The University of Sheffield (2023) for giving distinguished service or bringing distinction to the University, the City of Sheffield, or the region.

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Bryony Page para niños

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