She was born in
Great Yarmouth and attended Albany High School, Chorley, which is now called Albany Academy. In July 2007, she married Danny Massaro and became Laura Lengthorn-Massaro. She subsequently dropped 'Lengthorn' from her name and is now known professionally as Laura Massaro. She won her first top-level title at the German Open in 2004 and went on to become
British Open champion in 2013 and the
World Champion also in 2013, so becoming the first Englishwoman to hold both titles at once. She is also a three-time silver medallist for England in
Commonwealth Games. Massaro was shortlisted for the Sunday Times Sky Sports Sportswomen of the Year awards. She won the
WISPA Player of the Year award in 2011. She won the
US Open and the
Cleveland Classic in 2011, the Sharm El Sheikh Open in 2010, and the Monte Carlo Classic in 2008. In 2010, she was part of the English team that won the silver medal at the
2010 Women's World Team Squash Championships. Massaro also won the
British National Squash Championships in 2011, defeating
Jenny Duncalf in the final 7–11, 11–9, 7–11, 11–7, 11–2. She had previously finished runner-up at the championships in 2008 (losing in the final to
Alison Waters 11–6, 7–11, 8–11, 9–11). At the
2010 Commonwealth Games, Massaro won a silver medal in the women's doubles (partnering Jenny Duncalf). She followed up four years later at the
2014 Commonwealth Games with two silver medals: silver in singles after finishing runner-up to
Nicol David and another silver in doubles with Duncalf. In 2012, she was part of the England team that won the silver medal at the
2012 Women's World Team Squash Championships. Massaro won the British Open in 2013. She was the first English woman to do so in 22 years. After starting 2014 brightly by winning the
WSA World Tour title in Chicago, Massaro won the biggest title of her career to date at the
2013 World Open in Penang upon beating
Nour El Sherbini in the final. Her achievement, alongside that of reigning men's world champion
Nick Matthew, meant that England had two reigning world squash champions for the first time. Massaro's exceptional 2014 season continued when she was runner-up to David at the British Open in
Hull in May. At the
2014 Commonwealth Games in
Glasgow in July, Massaro went unbeaten through the women's singles – including a semi-final against compatriot Alison Waters – before falling to David in the gold medal match. She and Duncalf then joined forces in the doubles and won through to the final, where they lost to Indians Dipika Pallikal and Joshna Chinappa in straight games. October saw Massaro reach the quarter-finals of the US Open, where she lost to Nour El-Sherbini. In December, she was part of the team that helped England reclaim the world team title by winning the gold medal at the
2014 Women's World Team Squash Championships; she had previously won silver on three occasions. In 2015, she progressed to her third British Open final in succession before losing out to eventual victor
Camille Serme in the
2015 Women's British Open Squash Championship. Massaro started her 2015/16 season in strong fashion as she achieved victory at the US Open and
Qatar Classic. Upon beating world No. 1
Raneem El Weleily (who herself ended David's 9-year unbroken streak as world No. 1 several months prior) in the semi-finals of the
Hong Kong Open, she became the third Englishwoman (and first since 2004) to ascend to the top of the world rankings. In 2016, she was part of the English team that won the silver medal at the
2016 Women's World Team Squash Championships. In 2018, she was part of the English team that won the silver medal at the
2018 Women's World Team Squash Championships. Massaro won eight gold medals for the
England women's national squash team at the
European Squash Team Championships from her first in 2007 (under the name Lengthorn) to her last in 2019. Massaro retired at the end of the 2018/19 season and was appointed
Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the
2020 New Year Honours for services to squash. == Sponsors ==