Veronica Campbell-Brown

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Medal record
Center
Veronica Campbell at the 2011 World Championships
Women's aIhletics
Competitor for  Jamaica
Olympic Games
Gold 2004 Athens 200 m
Gold 2004 Athens 4x100 m relay
Gold 2008 Beijing 200 m
Silver 2000 Sydney 4x100 m relay
Bronze 2004 Athens 100 m
World Championships
Gold 2011 Daegu 200 m
Gold 2007 Osaka 100 m
Silver 2005 Helsinki 100 m
Silver 2005 Helsinki 4x100 m relay
Silver 2007 Osaka 200 m
Silver 2007 Osaka 4x100 m relay
Silver 2009 Berlin 200 m
Silver 2011 Daegu 100 m
Silver 2011 Daegu 4x100m relay
Commonwealth Games
Silver 2002 Manchester 100 m
Silver 2006 Melbourne 200 m
World Indoor Championships
Gold 2010 Doha 60 m
World Athletics Final
Gold 2004 Monaco 100 m
Gold 2004 Monaco 200 m
Gold 2005 Monaco 100 m
Silver 2005 Monaco 200 m
World Junior Championships
Gold 2000 Santiago 100 m
Gold 2000 Santiago 200 m
Silver 2000 Santiago 4x100 m relay
World Youth Championships
Gold 1999 Santiago 100 m
Gold 1999 Santiago 4x100 m relay
CARIFTA Games (Under 20s)
Gold 2001 Bridgetown 100 m
Gold 2001 Bridgetown 200 m
Gold 2001 Bridgetown 4x100 m relay
Gold 2000 St. George's 200 m
Gold 2000 St. George's 4x100 m relay
Gold 1997 Bridgetown 4x100 m relay
Silver 2000 St. George's 100 m
Silver 1999 Fort-de-France 4x100 m relay
Bronze 1999 Fort-de-France 200 m
CAC Junior Championships in Athletics
Gold 2000 San Juan 100 m
Gold 2000 San Juan 4x100 m relay

Veronica Campbell-Brown C.D (born 15 May 1982) is a track and field sprint athlete, competing internationally for Jamaica.[1] A five-time Olympic medalist, she is the reigning World and Olympic 200 metres champion. At the 2008 Beijing Olympics, she ran the 200 m in 21.74 seconds (the fastest time in a decade) and became the second woman in history to win two consecutive Olympic 200 m events, after Bärbel Wöckel of Germany did so at the 1976 and 1980 Olympics.[2] Brown is ranked the second fastest Jamaican woman over 60 metres (after Merlene Ottey), fourth fastest over 100 metres (after Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, Ottey and Kerron Stewart) and third fastest fastest over 200 metres (after Ottey and Grace Jackson).

Contents

[edit] Early life

Campbell was born to Cecil Campbell and Pamella Bailey[3] in Clarks Town, Trelawny, Jamaica on 15 May 1982. She has nine brothers and sisters and attended Vere Technical High School in Clarendon before pursuing higher education in the United States.

[edit] Junior career

In 1999, she won two gold medals the 100 m and 4 × 100 metres relay at the inaugural IAAF World Youth Championships. The following year, she became the first female to win the sprint double at the IAAF World Junior Championships. She took the 100 m in 11.12 s (the current championship record) and the 200 m in 22.87 s. At the 2000 Olympic Games, she ran the second leg on the silver medal winning 4 × 100 m relay team. In 2001, she was awarded the Austin Sealy Trophy for the most outstanding athlete of the 2001 CARIFTA Games.[4][5] That year, she won 3 gold medals (100m, 200m, and 4x100m relay) in the junior (U-20) category.


[edit] College career

Campbell attended Barton County Community College in Great Bend, Kansas, where she set several records and won many titles including four national junior college titles in the 60, 100 and 200 metres both indoors and outdoors. She set the current record for Barton County CC in the outdoor 100 m and 200 m. Campbell also excelled in academics earning an associates degree from Barton County in 2002 with a 3.8 grade average. She later attended the University of Arkansas where she stood out as a sprint star in a program dominated by long-distance runners.

[edit] Professional career

Campbell-Brown ran at the 2000 Summer Olympics in the 4×100 m relay along with Tayna Lawrence, Beverly McDonald, Merlene Frazer and sprint veteran and Olympic legend, Merlene Ottey. They finished second in the finals in a time of 42.13, behind neighbours, Bahamas which gave 18 year old Campbell-Brown her first Olympic medal.

At the 2004 Olympics, Campbell first placed third in the 100 m and two days later won the 200 m, beating out Allyson Felix of the United States. She later teamed up with Aleen Bailey, Tayna Lawrence, and Sherone Simpson to win the 4 × 100 m relay race.

In August 2005, Campbell won the silver medal in the 100 m at the 2005 World Championships in Athletics as well as another silver medal in the 4 × 100 m relay (together with Daniele Browning, Aleen Bailey and Sherone Simpson).

At the 2007 World Championships, Campbell won three medals with a gold in the 100 m, a silver in the 200 m (second to Felix) and a silver in the 4 × 100 m relay.

At the 2008 Jamaican Olympic trials, she finished fourth in the 100 m, thereby missing the qualifying requirement to automatically make the Jamaican Olympic roster for that event. She clocked 10.88 s in the final, which is the second fastest time ever for a fourth place finish. She however bounced back to take the 200 m final in a personal best of 21.94 s. Failing to qualify for the 100 m, she only competed in the 200 m and the 4 × 100 m relay at the Olympic Games. At the opening ceremony of the 2008 Olympics, Veronica Campbell-Brown carried the Jamaican flag during the Athletes' Parade. She successfully defended her Olympic 200 m title in a new personal best time of 21.74 s. She competed at the 4 × 100 m relay together with Shelly-Ann Fraser, Sheri-Ann Brooks and Aleen Bailey. In the first round heats, Jamaica placed first in front of Russia, Germany and China. The Jamaican teams' time of 42.24 s was the first time overall out of sixteen participating nations. With this result, Jamaica qualified for the final, replacing Brooks and Bailey with Sherone Simpson and Kerron Stewart. Jamaica did not finish the race due to a mistake in the baton exchange.[1]

At the end of the 2008 season, Campbell-Brown was selected the top 200 m runner in the world as well as the fourth best in the 100 m (following three other Jamaicans) by Track and Field News. She also finished eighth overall in voting for the magazine's Woman of the Year.[6]

She qualified for her third World Championships by winning the 200 m national title. She beat runners up Shelly Ann Fraser and Simone Facey with a time of 22.40 seconds in June 2009, although a toe injury had left her lacking full fitness.[7] At the 2009 World Championships Campbell-Brown was fourth in the 100 m final behind teammates Fraser and Stewart. She then won her second World 200 m silver behind American Allyson Felix. She closed the season at the Shanghai Golden Grand Prix, recording her fastest of the year (10.89) to take second behind Carmelita Jeter, who became the second fastest ever with 10.64 seconds.[8] Although she was beaten by Jeter, Campbell-Brown was the fourth fastest 100 m sprinter overall that season.[9]

In 2011 Veronica Campbell-Brown won the Jamaican athletic trials in both the 100 & 200 m and was one of the favorites for both gold medals at the world championships in Daegu . At the championships shewon the silver medal in the women's 100m in 10.98 behind Jeter who won in 10.90. She later went on to win her first 200m world title in a timer of 22.22 beating out Jeter and Felix who were second and third respectively.

[edit] Personal life

In 2007, Campbell married Omar Brown, a fellow Jamaican sprinter and University of Arkansas alumnus.[10] They currently live and train in Clermont, Florida. She was appointed as a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador in late 2009, and stated that she would use the role to promote gender equity in sport.[11]

[edit] Achievements

Campbell-Brown's personal best of 10.76 s in the 100 m ranks her all-time top ten in the world (9th place) and fourth among Jamaican women. Her 200 m best (21.74 s) ranks her in the all-time top ten in the world. This time is the third best among Jamaican women. It is the fastest time of the 21st Century, and the fastest since Marion Jones's 21.62 s in Johannesburg 1998.[12]

[edit] Personal bests

Event Time (seconds) Venue Date Remarks
60 metres 7.00 Doha, Qatar 14 March 2010
100 yards 9.91+ Ostrava, Czech Republic 31 May 2011 Official World Best
100 metres 10.76 Ostrava, Czech Republic 31 May 2011
200 metres 21.74 Beijing, China 21 August 2008
400 metres 52.24 Fayetteville, Arkansas, United States 22 January, 2005

+ = en route to a longer distance

  • All information from IAAF Profile[13]

[edit] Competition record

Veronica Campbell-Brown at the 2009 World Championships

Commonwealth Games

Year Tournament Venue Event Place Result
1998 World Junior Championships Annecy, France 100 m 17th 12.04
1999 World Youth Championships Bydgoszcz, Poland 100 m 1st 11.49
2000 World Junior Championships Santiago, Chile 100 m 1st 11.12
200 m 1st 22.87
2002 Commonwealth Games Manchester, England 100 m 2nd 11.00
4 x 100m 2nd 42.73
2004 Olympic Games Athens, Greece 100 m 3rd 10.97
200 m 1st 22.05
World Athletics Final Monaco, Monaco 100 m 1st 10.91
200 m 1st 22.64
2005 World Championships Helsinki, Finland 100 m 2nd 10.95
200 m 4th 22.38
World Athletics Final Monaco, Monaco 100 m 1st 10.92
200 m 2nd 22.37
2006 Commonwealth Games Melbourne, Australia 200 m 2nd 22.72A
2007 World Championships Osaka, Japan 100 m 1st 11.01
200 m 2nd 22.34
2008 Olympic Games Beijing, China 200 m 1st 21.74
2009 World Championships Berlin, Germany 100 m 4th 10.95
200 m 2nd 22.35
2010 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships Doha, Qatar 60 m 1st 7.00

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Awards
Preceded by
Brigitte Foster
Jamaica Sportswoman of the Year
2004–2005
Succeeded by
Sherone Simpson
Sporting positions
Preceded by
United States Allyson Felix
Women's 200 m Best Year Performance
2004
Succeeded by
United States Allyson Felix
Olympic Games
Preceded by
Sandie Richards
Flagbearer for  Jamaica
Beijing 2008
Succeeded by
TBD
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