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Driver who destroyed GB rider’s lifelong Olympic dream escapes with fine

Lauren Dolan, who has given up cycling, was seriously injured just 48 hours after winning bronze at UCI Road Worlds in Yorkshire

A motorist who destroyed a Great Britain Cycling Team rider’s lifelong dream of competing at the Olympics has escaped court with a fine.

Lauren Dolan, now aged 21, sustained serious injuries when the driver’s actions caused her to crash while she was riding with her father near their home in Devon, just 48 hours after she had won a bronze medal in the team time trial mixed relay at the UCI Road Cycling World Championships in Yorkshire.

The crash left the rider with serious shoulder injuries, a fractured femur and cuts to her elbows and knees, and while she tried to return to competition afterwards, she remained in severe pain as a result of a fracture to her femoral neck – the part of the femur immediately below the ball that sits within the hip socket.

The crash happened on an A road between Teignmouth and Dawlish on 24 September 2019 after the motorist, 73-year-old Robert Newton, made what was described as a dangerous overtake on the cyclists, slamming on his brakes immediately after pulling back in front of Dolan and causing her to hit a traffic island.

Newton has now been found guilty of driving without due care and attention, failure to stop and failure to report the accident, and was fined a total of £1,079. His driving licence was endorsed with 10 penalty points, and he was also ordered to pay a £78 victim surcharge and costs of £500.

Lauren Dolan

Lauren Dolan competing for GB before the incident

In a statement released via the law firm representing her, Dolan said: “The driver who caused the collision has ended my cycling career and he has only had to pay the sentence fine. I am grateful to be able to get on with my life but you can’t put a price on a young person’s career.

“The crash took away everything from that race, the biggest result of my career. I went from elation to complete and utter waste, what happened was so completely overwhelming.

“I had been at boarding school, spending three weeks at a time in Manchester, where I trained at the Velodrome, cycling was my life and I was on the way to fulfilling my childhood dream of cycling in the Olympics.

“The crash took all of that away, just when I was so elated by winning the bronze medal.

“I have only just started exercising again but I don’t cycle any more, the collision has taken away all of my confidence,” she added.

“I have to move on, I can’t help but think ‘what if, what if’, but I have to get on with my life. I hope to go to university and train to be a vet. It will be a completely different life.”

Dolan was represented by senior litigation executive Robin Selley of law firm Leigh Day, via her membership of British Cycling.

He said: “Although I am pleased this aggressive and impatient act has been recognised by the court, the actions of this driver have robbed a talented young cyclist of her dreams and future career in professional cycling.

“Lauren continues to suffer from the injuries sustained in this incident and her continued recovery and rehabilitation is the next step for her.

“We hope to be able to obtain a satisfactory outcome for her in the fullness of time but sadly, this kind of driving is becoming all too common on our roads and on this occasion, the actions of the driver have had such a devastating impact on one of the most talented young cyclists to have worn a Great Britain jersey.”

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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45 comments

Avatar
Hirsute replied to Gimpl | 3 years ago
3 likes

They speak American.

"Get on the pavement there is a lorry coming."

Where upon the passers by ran into the road to see a bird and were run over by a truck.

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Gimpl replied to Hirsute | 3 years ago
0 likes

Still English.

Even in the UK we use different words to descibe things but the common language is English. 

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HarrogateSpa replied to swldxer | 3 years ago
8 likes

What does the word 'licence' look like when viewed in a wing mirror?

Avatar
Captain Badger replied to HarrogateSpa | 3 years ago
1 like

HarrogateSpa wrote:

What does the word 'licence' look like when viewed in a wing mirror?

Depends which one, you asking about the right wing-mirror or the left wing- mirror?

 

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Captain Badger | 3 years ago
2 likes

Captain Badger wrote:

HarrogateSpa wrote:

What does the word 'licence' look like when viewed in a wing mirror?

Depends which one, you asking about the right wing-mirror or the left wing- mirror?

Here we go with the politics again

Avatar
0-0 replied to swldxer | 3 years ago
6 likes
swldxer wrote:

It is spelled "LICENCE" in the UK.

I prefer "spelt" and not "spelled". Which sounds wrongist 😛

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Jetmans Dad replied to swldxer | 3 years ago
2 likes

swldxer wrote:

It is spelled "LICENCE" in the UK.

Actually, in this context we would spell it "licence". Even your PC knows that upper and lower case letters are different characters ...

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open_roads | 3 years ago
6 likes

Road.cc - could you start adding a "joke sentence" tag to articles like this on? It would be quite helpful to compile all of them into a list we can write to our MPs with.

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DonLogan replied to open_roads | 3 years ago
4 likes

Good idea - we have Near Miss of the Day, what about Joke Sentence of the Day?

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a_to_the_j | 3 years ago
11 likes

...and just how many dont get reported - or suffer life changing incidents, just very very near misses from drivers actions that then stop cycling all together - we all hear and know of people who just say "its too dangerous on the roads to cycle"

until Police , Press and society actually want to do something about cycle safety on our roads this will continue to happen unfortunatley.

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NPlus1Bikelights | 3 years ago
13 likes

Hit and run should be insta prison. COVID or not.

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to NPlus1Bikelights | 3 years ago
0 likes

He didnt hit her / she didn't hit him. HE did a dangerous manouvre which caused her to crash avoiding a collision from what i can tell. Whilst I apprreciate it is the same in our eyes,  legally it would be a minefield. In this case he was charged and found guilty of the failure to stop at an accident but he could have easily gotten away with it as well. 

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Fifth Gear | 3 years ago
17 likes

Yet again a driver gets off very lightly for a horrific offence wth devastating consequences for a talented and innocent young cyclist. When will we start treating careless and dangerous driving with the seriousness it deserves?

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morgoth985 replied to Fifth Gear | 3 years ago
1 like

When drivers who are also cyclists outnumber those who aren't.  In other words: don't hold your breath.

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eburtthebike | 3 years ago
16 likes

Every incident of bad driving can result in life-changing injuries or death, as in this case, but the courts and the laws still treat it as a minor offence; it isn't, and every case should be treated as seriously as if it could have killed/seriously injured someone.  I'm betting the msm will be all over this.*

Best wishes to Lauren, and I hope she gets back on her bike one day.

 

 

 

*definitely contains gigantic amounts of irony.

EDIT; I'm sure the review of road law, announced so many years ago, will address this.

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