Claire Backhouse-Sharpe

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Claire_Backhouse-Sharpe an entity of type: Thing

Claire Backhouse (* 13. Mai 1958, verheiratete Claire Sharpe) ist eine ehemalige kanadische Badmintonspielerin. rdf:langString
Claire Backhouse-Sharpe (née Backhouse; born May 13, 1958) is a Canadian badminton player and coach. Between 1978 and 1994, she competed in five editions of the Commonwealth Games for Canada, winning a single gold medal and five silver medals. Backhouse-Sharpe also participated in the World Badminton Championships and Uber Cup on five occasions each as part of the Canada national badminton team. She won multiple national and regional titles and was assistant coach and manager of the British Columbia Badminton team at the 1994 Canada Winter Games and the 1995 Western Canada Games. Backhouse-Sharpe was inducted into the BC Sports Hall of Fame in 1997 and the Badminton Canada Hall of Fame. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Claire Backhouse-Sharpe
rdf:langString Claire Backhouse
rdf:langString Claire Backhouse
rdf:langString Claire Backhouse-Sharpe
rdf:langString Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
xsd:integer 66277100
xsd:integer 1078592790
xsd:date 1958-05-13
rdf:langString Claire Backhouse
rdf:langString Canada
xsd:integer 5
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rdf:langString Claire Backhouse (* 13. Mai 1958, verheiratete Claire Sharpe) ist eine ehemalige kanadische Badmintonspielerin.
rdf:langString Claire Backhouse-Sharpe (née Backhouse; born May 13, 1958) is a Canadian badminton player and coach. Between 1978 and 1994, she competed in five editions of the Commonwealth Games for Canada, winning a single gold medal and five silver medals. Backhouse-Sharpe also participated in the World Badminton Championships and Uber Cup on five occasions each as part of the Canada national badminton team. She won multiple national and regional titles and was assistant coach and manager of the British Columbia Badminton team at the 1994 Canada Winter Games and the 1995 Western Canada Games. Backhouse-Sharpe was inducted into the BC Sports Hall of Fame in 1997 and the Badminton Canada Hall of Fame.
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