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・ Clara Green Carl
・ Clara Gregory Baer
・ Clara Guerrero
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・ Clara H. Hasse
・ Clara H. Scott
・ Clara Hagarty
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Clara Hughes
・ Clara Hätzlerin
・ Clara Immerwahr
・ Clara in Blunderland
・ Clara Ingram Judson
・ Clara Ingram Judson Award
・ Clara is the Price
・ Clara Isabella Harris
・ Clara Jacobo
・ Clara Janés
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・ Clara Jessup Moore
・ Clara Jusidman
・ Clara Kathleen Rogers
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Clara Hughes : ウィキペディア英語版
Clara Hughes






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Clara Hughes, (born September 27, 1972) is a Canadian cyclist and speed skater, who has won multiple Olympic medals in both sports. Hughes won two bronze in the Summer Olympics in 1996 and four medals (one gold, one silver, two bronze) over the course of three Winter Olympics. She is tied with Cindy Klassen as the Canadian with the most Olympic medals, with six medals total.〔
Hughes is one of the few athletes who have competed in both the Summer and Winter Olympic games. Hughes is one of only five people to have podium finishes in the Winter and Summer versions of the games, and is the only person ever to have won multiple medals in both. Hughes is also the only Canadian to have won medals in both the Summer and Winter Olympics. Hughes was the first Canadian woman to win a medal in road cycling at the Olympics, winning two in the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.〔
As a result of her success in multiple sports and her humanitarian efforts, Hughes was named to both the Order of Manitoba and as an Officer of the Order of Canada. She is involved with Right To Play, which is an athlete-driven international humanitarian organization that uses sports to encourage the development of youth in disadvantaged areas. After winning her gold medal in 2006, she donated $10,000 to Right to Play.
Throughout her career Hughes received a number of other awards, trophies, and accolades. She was named Female Athlete of the Year by Speed Skating Canada in 2004 for long track. In 2006 she received the International Olympic Committee's Sport and Community Trophy. She was then named to the 2006 List of Most Influential Women in Sport and Physical Activity by the Canadian Association for Advancement of Women and Sport (CAAWS). In the summer of the year 2010, it was announced that she would receive a star on the Canadian Walk of Fame and on November 15, 2010, she was inducted into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame.
==Career==
Hughes was born in Winnipeg, and is a graduate of Elmwood High School. In an interview on CBC radio show ''Definitely Not the Opera'',〔CBC Radio, DNTO, November 26, 2011. Retrieved from http://www.cbc.ca/dnto/news-promo/2011/11/18/whats-driving-your-competitive-spirit-nov-26dec-6/〕 Hughes reveals that as a youth, she smoked cigarettes, drank a lot at a young age and did a lot of drugs, admitting she did not envision herself as an athlete. She was inspired to begin skating after witnessing Gaétan Boucher at the 1988 Winter Olympics. She started with speed skating, but in 1990 she moved to competitive cycling, competing in track cycling and road cycling.
Hughes started speed skating at the age of 16, and then took up the sport of cycling at the age of 17. She would eventually return to the sport of speed skating at the age of 28, after achieving success in the 1996 Atlanta Olympics. With her experience and endurance earned through cycling, Hughes went on to a successful career competing in the 3,000 m and 5,000 m. This would eventually lead her to medal in these long distance events at the Winter Olympics. She then returned to cycling, at the age of 38, to later successfully return for the 2012 London Olympics.

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