Molly Caudrey, Britain’s pole-vaulting medal hope with a gruesome injury history

Molly Caudrey
Early life
Prodigy
Fifth-placed finish
Improvement
“Felt like a dream”
Overcoming
“Caught”
Surgeries
More injuries
Onwards and upwards
4.86m
Ahead of schedule
Away from athletics
“Not actually a model”
Keep an eye on
Molly Caudrey

Caudrey, 23, is set to compete for Great Britain at the upcoming Paris Olympics where she hopes to take home a medal in the pole vault. But how did she overcome a gruesome injury to become one of the form jumpers in athletics?

Early life

Caudrey was born in Truro, Cornwall on the 17th of March, 2000. She started competing from a young age with the Cornwall Athletics Club, where she was coached by her father.

Prodigy

Caudrey was named to the England team for the 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast. Aged just 17, she was the youngest competitor in the English team, per the BBC.

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Fifth-placed finish

A fifth-placed finish for Caudrey repaid the faith placed in her by the English side and showed the promise that now has her amongst the favourties for Olympic gold.

Improvement

Four years on, Caudrey once was again selected to compete at the Commonwealth Games, this time finishing second in Birmingham.

“Felt like a dream”

Speaking to the BBC after her silver-medal-winning performance, Caudrey said, “It feels like a dream, last night I had the most vivid dream that I came third and then I woke up and thought no, it was a dream - now I'm here and I came second.”

Overcoming

Just eight months out from the games in Birmingham, Caudrey had nearly lost her finger in a freak weight-training accident that nearly cost her her career.

“Caught”

Caudrey told The Sun, “I was doing snatching and, as I brought the bar down, my finger caught between where you rack it and the bar.” Causing her finger to be “90% off”.

Surgeries

Cuadrey continued, explaining that it took three surgeries to correct the damage to her finger, but she will sport a scar for the rest of her life.

More injuries

A further two surgeries were required to fix Achilles injuries, that, “put me out for almost nine months,” from The Sun.

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Onwards and upwards

Since Caudrey’s injury battles, she has continued on an upward trajectory setting personal best after personal best. This included a fifth-place finish at the World Championships with a jump of 4.75m.

4.86m

At an athletics meet in France this year, Caudrey set a new personal best of 4.86m, per the BBC. This jump would have been enough to secure a silver medal at the 2020 Olympics, just 4cm short of gold.

Ahead of schedule

Caudrey told The Sun, “If I can just get to the final in Paris then you never know what is going to happen. Every athlete has their timeline and mine was always 2028.”

Away from athletics

Away from pole vaulting, Caudrey has racked up an impressive 206k followers on Instagram. attracting sponsorship deals from the likes of Adidas and others.

“Not actually a model”

Speaking to The Daily Mail, Caudrey had to dispel rumours of a “side hustle” as a model, telling the publication, “Just to clarify, no, I am not actually a model.”

Keep an eye on

With the Paris Olympics mere months away, be sure to keep an eye on Caudrey’s progress as she builds up to what could well be a gold medal!

 

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