Wheelchair basketball star Charlotte Moore has more sporting achievements to her name than most, but it's Commonwealth gold she is on the hunt for.

The 27-year-old clinched bronze on home soil as the 3x3 version made its Commonwealth debut at Birmingham 2022 and now returns for a second go at Glasgow 2026 hungry for more.

A stalwart of the sport, the Coventry native made her international debut at the 2013 European Championships aged 14 and has gone on to represent Great Britain at every major event since.

And with world and European medals to her name, she is now ready to clinch the Commonwealth crown.

"I'm really excited to be going again," she said. "I think any chance to represent England is an amazing opportunity and for 3x3 to be in the Commonwealth Games again, I think is really exciting after last time.

"We're going to win, of course. You cannot go in not aiming for the top.

"But we've got some tough competition, so it's going to be a challenge, but one that we're definitely ready for."

Moore might be one of the biggest names on the wheelchair basketball scene, but her talents also lie further afield.

She won four Virgin London wheelchair mini-marathons as a child, is an impressive wheelchair tennis player and was chosen to carry the London 2012 Olympic torch on its journey through GB ahead of the home Games.

But it was wheelchair basketball that was the sport that stuck after coming across the sport in an unlikely scenario."My entry was a bit of potluck if I'm honest. I used to do athletics when I was younger and I was out shopping with my mum and we bumped into a guy and he asked if I had ever done wheelchair basketball," she said.

"I went and tried it, and I was the only girl, I was the only young person. I was like, 'oh I don't know about this'.

"My dad came with me so that I didn't feel quite alone because able-bodied people can play with you up to a certain level.

"We went together every week and then slowly I started to enjoy it and more women started playing, more juniors and it was just great fun."

Moore is one of multiple athletes who ply their trade in both the 5v5 and 3x3 formats of the sport.

She helped Great Britain win world silver in the former back in 2018 and has represented ParalympicsGB at the Rio 2016, Tokyo 2020, and Paris 2024 Paralympics.But while most of her success has come in 5v5, the fast-paced half-court version of the sport is still the one that excites her the most.

"It is always a lot but 3x3 kind of feels like a bit of an escape in some ways because it's different people and different experiences from the 5v5 game," she said.

"Luckily it's something that I really enjoy. So having both is really busy, but there is also no time to dwell on things, you kind of just have to get on with it.

"It's fiery, it's feisty. It's so fast to play and I just enjoy the competition.

"We have a really nice group of people to spend time with off-court and on-court, and I think that's what makes it such a special tournament."