<p>First of all, Cambridge doesn’t offer a JD program. You can do an LLM as a post-graduate (ie, a person who has completed an undergraduate degree), but usually you have to have done law as an undergraduate. In the UK most lawyers do law as their <em>only</em> undergraduate subject and then do apprenticeships while they take their exams- an LLM is an exception, not the rule (you might enjoy this article about ‘why do an LLM’: <a href=“http://www.llm-guide.com/article/607/7-reasons-why-lawyers-do-an-llm”>http://www.llm-guide.com/article/607/7-reasons-why-lawyers-do-an-llm</a>)</p>
<p>Students who did not do law as undergraduates do a “conversion” course to get the legal underpinnings, then sit the same sort of exams the others sat. It is not like the US, where you do all of your law degree in graduate school. Hence, <em>none</em> of your non-law courses are interesting to Cambridge. </p>
<p>So, in UK terms, what you are asking to do is to skip law school and go straight into an advanced law degree. If the profession in which you have ‘excelled’ is law, then you may be able to substitute experience for coursework, otherwise I don’t see how you would qualify for a post-grad Law degree at Cambridge. </p>
<p>(also, the exceptions for older students- politely called “Mature” students- apply to people who have not finished an undergraduate degree. </p>