Career
Jones joined the West Pennine Road Club to ride on Sunday outings. She rode her first race in 1974 and five years later tied with Julie Earnshaw for first place in the national junior 10-mile time trial championship. They recorded 25m 42s.
The experience persuaded her to race seriously.
She rode the world road race championship for Britain in 1980, when she was 18, and took the bronze medal behind the American Beth Heiden on a tough circuit at Sallanches, in the French Alps. The Golden Book of Cycling, which she signed when she was 29, said: "Her potential was evident: Britain had a new star in the making."
She said:
lieutenant was just plain daft.
We were going downhill and I just rode past them. Then I looked back, saw I had a gap and kept going.
I was praying my legs wouldn"t collapse.
In 2009, she was inducted into the British Cycling Hall of Fame.