Shelly-ann fraser-pryce age

Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce

Jamaican track and field sprinter (born )

Fraser-Pryce in after winning her third &#;m world title.

Birth&#;nameShelly-Ann Fraser
Born () 27 December (age&#;38)
Kingston, Jamaica
Height&#;m (5&#;ft 0&#;in)[note 1]
Weight52&#;kg (&#;lb)
CountryJamaica
SportTrack and field
Event(s)60&#;m, &#;m, &#;m
Club
  • Elite Performance Track Club (–)
  • MVP Track Club (–)
Coached by
  • Reynaldo Walcott (–)
  • Stephen Francis (–)
Olympic finals
World finals
  • Osaka
  • 4x&#;m, &#;Silver
  • Berlin
  • &#;m, &#;Gold
  • 4x&#;m, &#;Gold
  • Daegu
  • &#;m, 4th
  • 4x&#;m, &#;Silver
  • Moscow
  • &#;m, &#;Gold
  • &#;m, &#;Gold
  • 4x&#;m, &#;Gold
  • Beijing
  • &#;m, &#;Gold
  • 4x&#;m, &#;Gold
  • Doha
  • &#;m, &#;Gold
  • 4x&#;m, &#;Gold
  • Eugene
  • &#;m, &#;Gold
  • &#;m, &#;Silver
  • 4x&#;m, &#;Silver
  • Budapest
  • &#;m, &#;Bronze
  • 4x&#;m, &#;Silver
Highest world ranking
  • &#;m: 1st (, , , , , )
  • &#;m: 1st ()
Personal bests
  • 60 m: s ()
  • m: s ()
  • m: s ()

Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce (néeFraser; born December 27, ) is a Jamaican track and fieldsprinter competing in the 60&#;metres, &#;m and &#;m.

She is widely regarded as one of the greatest sprinters of all time.

One of the most enduring track athletes in history, Fraser-Pryce's career spans over a decade and a half, from the late s to the s.

Biography of nat king cole Archived from the original on August 17, Tools Tools. Archived from the original on July 15, The New York Times.

Her success on the track, including her consistency at major championships, helped to usher in the golden age of Jamaican sprinting. In the &#;m, her signature event, she is a two-time Olympic gold medallist and a five-time world champion. In the &#;m, she has won gold and silver at the World Athletics Championships, as well as an Olympic silver medal.

An eight-time Olympic medallist, she rose from relative obscurity at the Beijing Olympics to become the first Caribbean woman to win gold in the &#;m. At the London Olympics, she became the third woman in history to defend an Olympic &#;m title.

Shelly-ann fraser-pryce biography of michael jackson life Archived from the original on March 16, Archived from the original on January 5, In July, she competed in numerous Diamond League meetings on the world circuit, nursing for the first 15 months after giving child. The outstanding sprinter has made quite a fortune from her hard work in her professional career as an athlete.

After injury affected her season, she won bronze at the Rio Olympics. Thirteen years after her first Olympic win, she won a silver medal at the Tokyo Olympics, becoming the most decorated &#;m sprinter at the Olympic Games.

At the biennial World Athletics Championships, Fraser-Pryce is one of the most decorated athletes in history, winning ten gold, five silver medals and a bronze.

She is the only sprinter to win five world titles in the &#;m—in , , , , and Her win in made her the first mother in 24 years to claim a global &#;m title,[4] while her win in at age 35 made her the oldest sprinter ever to become world champion.[5] In , she became the first woman to sweep the &#;m, &#;m and 4&#;×&#;&#;m at the same World Championship, and was voted the IAAF World Athlete of the Year.

She also won the 60&#;m world indoor title in , becoming the first ever female athlete to hold world titles in all four sprint events at the same time.[6]

A dominant force in women's sprinting, Fraser-Pryce has won more individual global[note 2] sprint titles than any other female sprinter in history,[7][8] and is the most decorated &#;m sprinter of all time.[5] Nicknamed the "pocket rocket" for her petite stature and explosive block starts, her personal best of &#;seconds makes her the third fastest woman ever.

In , CBC Sports recognized her as the greatest &#;m sprinter of all time,[9] while many sources described her as the greatest female sprinter in history.[1][10][11][12][13] In , she won the Laureus World Sports Award for Sportswoman of the Year.

Biography

Early years

Shelly-Ann Fraser was born to Orane Fraser and Maxine Simpson in the inner city community of Waterhouse, in Kingston.[14][15] She was raised with her two brothers by her mother, a former athlete who worked as a street vendor.[16][17] A gifted sprinter from a very young age, she started running barefoot in primary school.[18][19] Throughout her time at the Wolmer's High School for Girls, she was uncertain about pursuing a career in track and field.[20] However, she was active on the youth athletics scene, competing in the famous Inter-Secondary Schools Boys and Girls Championships (known locally as "Champs"), and winning &#;m bronze at age [14][21] In , she ran &#;s to win the &#;m title at the Jamaican Under Championships, and later that year helped the Jamaican junior team win 4&#;×&#;&#;m relay gold at the Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships, held in Bridgetown, Barbados.[22][23] At the CARIFTA Games in Trinidad and Tobago, she won bronze in the &#;m in &#;s, and earned a gold medal as part of the 4&#;×&#;&#;m relay team.[24][25][26]

In , Fraser-Pryce started attending the University of Technology, Jamaica, where she met Stephen Francis.[27] At the time, Francis was the head coach at the MVP (Maximising Velocity and Power) Track Club, and had guided the career of former &#;m world record holder Asafa Powell.[27] Despite encouragement from peers and coaches, Fraser-Pryce was unfocused as a young athlete.[20] She was often late for practice, and at times wouldn't complete her workouts for fear that she would become too muscular.[20]

Fraser-Pryce began to achieve success on the senior national and international stages in [20] At age 20, she was fifth in the &#;m at the Jamaican National Senior Championships in June, setting a new personal best of &#;s.[22] Although a fifth-place finish meant that she was ineligible to compete in the &#;m event at the Osaka World Championships, she was selected as a reserve for Jamaica's 4&#;×&#;&#;m relay team.[20] Hoping to gain experience at an international level, she made her debut on the European athletics circuit in July and saw promising results.[22][28] She first ran a wind-assisted &#;s for second place at the Budapest Iharos Memorial, followed by &#;s to win the Meeting Terra Sarda in Italy.[22][29] In August, she again won the &#;m at the Stockholm DN-Galan, posting &#;s.[30]

At the World Championships in September, Fraser-Pryce ran only in the relay heats, helping her team place second.[20] She eventually earned a silver medal when the Jamaican team finished behind the United States in the 4&#;×&#;&#;m relay final.[31] Despite her initial anxiety towards competing at the World Championships, Fraser-Pryce credited her experience in Osaka for raising her confidence, changing her attitude towards athletics, and for making her much more focused.[20]

First Olympic m gold

Fraser-Pryce's breakthrough in was sudden and unexpected.[19][32] At the Jamaican Olympic trials in June, she was a surprise second-place finisher in the hotly contested &#;m final, posting her first ever sub&#;s clocking of &#;s.[28][33] Compatriots Kerron Stewart won the national title in &#;s and Sherone Simpson was third in &#;s, completing the Olympic team for this event.[33][34] However, Jamaican sprint darling Veronica Campbell-Brown, the world &#;m champion and Olympic &#;m champion, finished fourth in &#;s, failing to make the team.[33][35] With Fraser-Pryce barely known among the local athletics scene, many considered her too inexperienced for the Olympics, and petitioned the Jamaica Athletics Administrative Association (JAAA) to have her swapped in favour of Campbell-Brown.[31][33] However, the JAAA upheld its rule permitting only the top-three finishers on the team.[31] Fraser-Pryce recalled being disappointed but mostly unfazed by the backlash, and saw her underdog status as an advantage: "I went in just wanting to do well.

Shelly-ann fraser-pryce biography of michael jackson for kids Medal record. Archived from the original on September 24, The following year, Fraser-Pryce proved that she was no one-hit wonder by capturing m gold at the Berlin World Championships. Archived from the original on October 4,

So there was no pressure and nobody expected anything of me and I was able to compete better, relaxed and be my best."[14]

"I still look back at that race and get goosebumps. To be the first Jamaican woman to win [an Olympic &#;m] gold medal was so exciting. To add that title to my résumé was equally as important as the medal itself."

– Fraser-Pryce on her win at the Beijing Olympics.[31]

At the Beijing Olympics, Fraser-Pryce faced off against the American trio of Torri Edwards, Muna Lee and decorated sprinter Lauryn Williams.[24] She won her heat in &#;s, her quarterfinal in &#;s, and her semifinal in &#;s.[36][37] In the &#;m final, she led a Jamaican sweep of the medals, trailed by Sherone Simpson and Kerron Stewart who both posted &#;s for silver (no bronze was awarded).[37][38] Replicating the success of compatriot Usain Bolt from the night before, she became the first ever Caribbean woman to win &#;m gold at the Olympics.[38][39] Her winning time of &#;s was not only an improvement of seconds from her previous season's best,[28] it was also the second fastest in Olympic history at the time, behind Florence Griffith Joyner's Olympic record.[35][38] Their top-three finish gave Jamaica the first ever sweep of medals in a women's &#;m by any nation at any Olympics or world championships.[40]

In the 4&#;×&#;&#;m relay, Fraser-Pryce ran the lead leg alongside Stewart, Simpson and Campbell-Brown.

The Jamaican team won their heat and qualified as the fastest overall for the final.[41] However, disappointment followed in the final when a botched baton exchange led to their disqualification.[37][42]

Fraser-Pryce returned to the European circuit after the Olympics, placing second at the British Grand Prix in &#;s,[43] first at the Athletissima track meet in &#;s, and first at the Rieti meet in &#;s.[44][45] She capped her season in September after running &#;s to win &#;m gold at the IAAF World Athletics Final.[46]

First m world title

The following year, Fraser-Pryce proved that she was no one-hit wonder by capturing &#;m gold at the Berlin World Championships.[31] Despite ultimately taking the title, her early season was marred by injury, followed by an appendix surgery in April, which impeded her training and preparation.[47][48] In June, she finished fourth at the Prefontaine Classic, but later that month, she ran a world-leading &#;s to claim her first &#;m national title at the Jamaican Championships, finishing ahead of defending champion Kerron Stewart (&#;s).[33][47] At the Rome Golden Gala in July, Stewart emerged as gold medal favourite after defeating Fraser-Pryce in &#;s, becoming the fifth fastest woman in history at the time.[49]

At the World Championships in August, Fraser-Pryce finished second in her heat and quarterfinal, but came into form in the semifinal with &#;s, the fastest semifinal time in the history of the championship (at the time).[50] In the &#;m final, she made a flying start and held off a late challenge from Stewart to win her first world title in a new personal best of &#;s.[50] Sports writer Matthew Brown attributed her victory to "one of the most sensational starts ever seen in a major final [she was] a metre and a half clear of the field before a tenth of the race was run."[48] Stewart equalled her own personal best of &#;s for silver, while Carmelita Jeter of the United States (&#;s) prevented another Jamaican podium sweep by beating Campbell-Brown (&#;s) to the bronze.[50][51] Fraser-Pryce's winning time made her the joint third fastest woman in history at the time, and shaved one-hundredth of a second from Merlene Ottey's Jamaican record.[37][50] With the victory, she also joined Gail Devers of the U.S.

as the second woman to hold the &#;m Olympic and world titles simultaneously (a feat she replicated in the – season).[50][52] Giddy with excitement, Fraser-Pryce was shocked at her achievement: "Olympic and world champion – can you believe it? Me?"[48] Asked whether she considered herself the favourite going into the final, she praised her rivals, saying, "That’s something I never do.

Shelly-ann fraser-pryce biography of michael jackson World Championships. June 26, Despite such a moderate start, the season was one of the most victorious seasons for the outstanding sprinter. Vancouver Sun.

The board is blank at the start. Everybody else wants it too."[48] Days later, she added a second gold medal at the championships as part of Jamaica's 4&#;×&#;&#;m relay team, running alongside Stewart, Simone Facey and Aleen Bailey.[1][53]

Back on the international circuit that year, she finished fourth at the Zürich Weltklasse in &#;s, second at the Memorial Van Damme in &#;s, and first at the Rieti Meeting in &#;s.[54][55] She ended her season in September following the IAAF World Athletics Final, where she clocked &#;s for silver behind Jeter in the &#;m final.[56]

– Suspension and return

In June , Fraser-Pryce received a six-month suspension from athletics after a urine sample taken at the Shanghai Diamond League tested positive for oxycodone.[57][58][59] Fraser-Pryce insisted that her positive result was due to medication her coach recommended for a toothache, and that she had neglected to properly declare it.

Although oxycodone is banned as a narcotic, it is not considered performance enhancing or to be a masking agent.[59][60] She later stated, "[I'm] supposed to set examples – so whatever it is I put in my body it's up to me to take responsibility for it and I have done that."[60] She resumed competition in January , and her track results from were nullified.[60][61]

Fraser-Pryce married Jason Pryce in January , changing her name from Fraser to Fraser-Pryce.[60][62] She had a late start to her season, hampered by a calf injury that prevented her from competing at the Jamaican National Championships.[63] Her first international race of the season was at the Prefontaine Classic on June 4, where she finished fourth in &#;s behind Carmelita Jeter (who ran a world leading &#;s), Marshevet Myers of the U.S.

(&#;s) and Kerron Stewart (&#;s).[64] She withdrew from the Athletissima track meet in Switzerland at the end of June, and returned on July 19 for the Meeting Sport Solidarietà, where she placed first in &#;s.[63][65]

Ahead of the World Championships, to be held in Daegu, South Korea, Fraser-Pryce was not considered the favourite for gold, and her season's best of &#;s ranked her the sixth fastest of the year.[66][67] At the championships, she placed second in her &#;m heat in &#;s, then first in her semifinal in &#;s.[68] In the world &#;m final, she started quickly but could not maintain the lead, finishing fourth in &#;s, and missing the podium by &#;s.[69][70] Gold went to Carmelita Jeter in &#;s, while compatriot Veronica Campbell-Brown (&#;s) and Kelly-Ann Baptiste of Trinidad and Tobago (&#;s) collected silver and bronze respectively.[69][71] Fraser-Pryce later ran the lead leg on Jamaica's 4&#;×&#;&#;m relay team, earning silver behind the United States in a new national record of &#;s.[72][73]

Olympic m title defence

Beginning with her first Olympic win in , Fraser-Pryce had been at the forefront of a booming sprint rivalry between Jamaica and the United States.[74][75] At the Beijing Olympics, Jamaica captured five of a possible six gold medals in the sprints, with Fraser-Pryce and Campbell-Brown winning the women's &#;m and &#;m respectively, and Usain Bolt dominating the men's &#;m, &#;m, and 4&#;×&#;&#;m relay.[74][76] Jamaica's success continued through the and World Championships, highlighted by Bolt's record-breaking performances at each event.[77] Fraser-Pryce's career dip in and saw U.S.

sprinter Carmelita Jeter rising to prominence in the &#;m, becoming the fastest woman alive (at the time) and clinching the world title in [78] Fraser-Pryce later described Jeter as one of the toughest rivals she faced throughout her career.[79]

Despite a slow start, the athletics season proved to be one of the most successful for the diminutive sprinter.[80] In May, she posted &#;s for third place at the Doha Diamond League, then &#;s for second place at the Rome Golden Gala.[81][82] By June, she was in winning form, cruising to victory at the Adidas Grand Prix in &#;s.[83] Weeks later, she won the sprint double at the Jamaican Olympic Trials in Kingston.[84] In the &#;m, she sped to a new personal best (and world lead) of &#;s, which improved on the national record she set in and moved her to fourth on the all-time list of fastest &#;m sprinters.[84][85] In the &#;m, she defeated the reigning world and Olympic &#;m champion Veronica Campbell-Brown in a career-best &#;s.[84] While preparing for the Olympics, she was also completing her Bachelor of Science degree at the University of Technology in Jamaica.[86]

"I had a lot of pressure going into that Olympic Games… I definitely felt relieved crossing that line because I wanted it so bad.

I wanted to back up [my win] to prove that I’m good and that I belong.”

– Fraser-Pryce on defending her Olympic m title.[87]

At the Olympics in London, Fraser-Pryce won her &#;m heat and semifinal in &#;s and &#;s respectively.[88] She progressed to the final as the second fastest qualifier behind Carmelita Jeter's &#;s.[89] In the &#;m final, Fraser-Pryce was quickest from the blocks with Jeter in close pursuit, and she ultimately leaned at the finish line for a narrow victory to defend her title.[89][86] Her time of &#;s was the second fastest in Olympic history at the time, while the race itself was one of the fastest Olympic &#;m finals, placing six women under 11 seconds.[61][90] Jeter claimed silver in a season's best &#;s,[91] and Campbell-Brown earned bronze in &#;s.[90][92] With her win, Fraser-Pryce joined Americans Wyomia Tyus (, ) and Gail Devers (, ) as the third woman to defend an Olympic &#;m title.[18][80] Days later in the &#;m final, Fraser-Pryce lowered her personal best to &#;s.[93] However, she was unable to overhaul Allyson Felix of the U.S., who took the gold in &#;s.[93][94] Fraser-Pryce later earned a second silver medal in the 4&#;×&#;&#;m relay, running alongside Campbell-Brown, Sherone Simpson and Kerron Stewart.[95] Their finishing time of &#;s was a new Jamaican record, but well behind the United States' world record of &#;s.[95][96]

Overall, Jamaica had another strong showing in athletics at the Olympics.[74][97] In addition to Fraser-Pryce retaining her &#;m title, Bolt also continued his winning streak in the men's events, leading a top-two finish for Jamaica in the &#;m final, a sweep of the podium in the &#;m final,[98] and a new world record in the 4&#;×&#;&#;m relay.[99] Following the Olympics, Fraser-Pryce closed out her season by taking the &#;m title at the Diamond League.[]

Triple gold and IAAF World Athlete of the Year

In , Fraser-Pryce continued to show her consistency when she became the first woman to sweep the &#;m, &#;m and 4&#;×&#;&#;m at a single World Championship.[37][] Her achievements were matched by Usain Bolt in the men's events, giving Jamaica a clean sweep of the sprinting gold medals at the championships.[] Fraser-Pryce attributed her successful year to an increase in focus on her track career (after finishing school in November )[] and a new training regimen that emphasised the &#;m.[][] She admitted to previously "hating" the longer sprint, and is hesitant to fully embrace the title of a "&#;m—&#;m runner." However, she explained that her motivation for focusing on the &#;m stemmed from a desire to improve her &#;m performance.[] She started the season early, recording &#;s for an easy win at the Kingston Invitational in January.[] Over the next few months, she secured Diamond League wins in Shanghai, Eugene, and Paris in the &#;m, followed by a &#;m victory in Doha.[] In June, she claimed her second consecutive national &#;m title at the Jamaican Championships, setting a new world-leading time of &#;s.[][]

Ahead of the Moscow World Championship, Fraser-Pryce was the favourite to win both the &#;m and &#;m sprint titles.[] In Moscow, she dominated her &#;m heat and semi-final.[] In the m final, she surged from the blocks and left her rivals trailing, claiming gold in a new world leading &#;s.[][] Her second margin of victory ahead of silver medallist Murielle Ahouré of the Ivory Coast (&#;s) was the largest in World Championship history.[][] Defending world champion Carmelita Jeter, the best placed of the four Americans in the final, collected bronze in &#;s.[] By claiming a second world title, Fraser-Pryce became the first woman to win the &#;m twice at both the Olympics (, ) and the World Championships (, ).[17][]

In the world &#;m final