|   Sarah Calvert at the 2025 UK Athletics Championships   | |||||||||||||||
| Personal information | |||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nationality | British | ||||||||||||||
| Born | 29 June 2001 | ||||||||||||||
| Sport | |||||||||||||||
| Sport | Athletics | ||||||||||||||
Event  | Middle-distance running, | ||||||||||||||
| Club | Livingston Edinburgh Univ  | ||||||||||||||
| Achievements and titles | |||||||||||||||
| Personal best(s) | 800m: 2:00.32 (2025) 1500m: 4:04.33 (2025) Mile: 4:27.30 (2025)  | ||||||||||||||
Medal record 
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Sarah Calvert (born 29 June 2001) is a British middle-distance runner from Scotland. She won the 1500 metres title at the 2025 UK Athletics Championships. [1]
Calvert attended Linlithgow Academy in West Lothian. She underwent an operation for the back condition scoliosis when she was 15 years-old and could not compete for a year. [2] She won the Scottish Schools Championships at under-20 level over both 800 metres and 1500 metres in both 2018 and 2019. Her younger sister Isla is also a middle-distance runner. [3] [4] She later combined running with studying medicine at Edinburgh University. [5] [6]
A member of Livingston AC, she was coached in her early career by Sandra Hardacre and later by Luke Gunn. [7] [8]
She finished seventh over 800 metres in a personal best time of 2:05.68 at the 2019 European Athletics U20 Championships in Borås, Sweden. [9]
She won the Scottish Athletics 3000 metres championships in June 2023. [10] That month, she won the British U23 title over 1500 metres ahead of Alexandra Millard. [11] She competed at the 2023 European Athletics U23 Championships in July 2023 in Espoo, Finland. [12] She won Scottish titles over 800 metres and 1500 metres in August 2023, that month she set a new Scottish Native Record - the fastest time by a Scot in Scotland - for the women’s mile run at the Monument Mile Classic event in Stirling, breaking the record set by Yvonne Murray in 1985. [13]
She was announced in the initial intake of Stride Athletics "The Athlete Springboard" at the start of 2025. [14] She then became Scottish Indoor 3000 metres champion in January 2025 with a personal best time of 9:15.67. [15] In May 2025, she won the British Universities and Colleges Sport (BUCS) outdoor title over 1500 metres. [16] In June 2025, she lowered her personal best for the 800 metres whilst competing in Austria, running a time of 2:00.32. [17]
She was named in the British team for the 2025 Summer World University Games in Germany, where she won the silver medal in the women's 1500 metres. [18] [19] [20]
On 3 August, she became the British 1500 metres champion, after she won the event at the 2025 UK Athletics Championships in Birmingham in 4:16.27 finishing ahead of Laura Muir. [21] [22] [23] A surprise victory, the win was described as "unbelievable, the story of the weekend, a fairytale" during the BBC Sport live commentary. [24] On 9 August 2025, she lowered her personal best for the 1500 metres to 4:04.33 as she finished fourth at the World Athletics Continental Tour bronze meeting in Oordegem, Belgium. [25] Also in August, she placed third at the Monument Mile in Stirling. [26]
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