Joan Benoit
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Medal record | |||
---|---|---|---|
Joan Benoit |
|||
Women's Athletics | |||
Competitor for United States | |||
Olympic Games | |||
Gold | 1984 Los Angeles | Marathon |
Joan Benoit Samuelson (born May 16, 1957) is an American marathon runner who won gold at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, the year that the women's marathon was introduced. As a result she was the first ever women's Olympic marathon champion.
Contents |
[edit] Career
Born in Cape Elizabeth, Maine, Benoit took to long-distance running to help recover from a broken leg suffered while slaloming. At Bowdoin College she excelled in athletics and then entered the 1979 Boston Marathon as a relative unknown. She won the race, while wearing a Red Sox cap,[1] in 2:35:15, knocking eight minutes off the competition record. She repeated that success with a victory again in 1983 that took more than two minutes off the world's best time, set by Grete Waitz in the London Marathon just the day before, despite having had surgery on her Achilles tendons two years earlier. Her Boston course record of 2:22:43, set in 1983, was not broken for another 11 years.[2]
At the 1984 Summer Olympics she won the first Olympic women's marathon in a time of 2:24.52 in hot and smoggy conditions, more than a minute ahead of her rivals; again despite surgery, this time arthroscopic surgery on her knee 17 days before the trials earlier that year. The athletes behind her were Grete Waitz, Rosa Mota and Ingrid Kristiansen, all marathon legends in their own right.
Benoit enjoyed success at non-marathon distances as well, winning the prestigious Falmouth Road Race (7.1 miles) a total of six times (1976, 1978, 1981-1983, and 1985), breaking the course record on four of those occasions.
Although she won the 1985 Chicago marathon, defeating Kristiansen and Mota in an American Record time of 2:21:21 (that would last as the AR 18 years until broken by Deena Kastor in 2003 in London), Benoit was hampered in the years after her Olympic victory by injuries and struggled to compete in major races. She received the 1985 James E. Sullivan Award as the top amateur athlete in the United States.
[edit] After retirement
Since retirement from competitive running, she has written books including Running Tide and Running for Women, and has opened a running clinic. Aside from this she is a coach to women's cross-country and long-distance athletes, and is a motivational speaker and sports commentator. She also founded the Beach to Beacon Road Race, a 10 km (6.21 mile) race held in Cape Elizabeth, Maine each August that goes from Crescent Beach State Park to Ft. Williams Park and Portland Head Light. The race attracts many of the world's top distance runners. Elite runners often run this race and then, the following weekend, run the Falmouth Road Race on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Benoit has also won that race several times and ran it last in 2005. In 2003, Benoit won the Maine half marathon, defeating a field dominated by runners two decades her junior, and she was (at age 46 at the time) faster than all but six men overall, finishing in 1:18. In 2006 she helped pace former cycling champion Lance Armstrong as he competed in the New York City Marathon. At the 2008 US Olympic Team trials, at the age of 50, she finished in 2:49:08, setting a new US 50+ record and beating her personal goal of a mid-2:50s retirement marathon. Benoit resides in Freeport, Maine.
[edit] External links
[edit] References
- ^ Cool Running :: Olympic Champion Joan Benoit Samuelson To Be Guest of Honor at Manchester Marathon - Registration Closed
- ^ 2004 Boston Marathon Media Guide, published by Boston Athletic Association with John Hancock
|
Records | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Grete Waitz |
Women's Marathon World Record Holder April 18, 1983 – April 21, 1985 |
Succeeded by Ingrid Kristiansen |
Preceded by Marja Wokke |
Women's Half Marathon World Record Holder 1981-01-18 – 1982-05-15 |
Succeeded by Grete Waitz |
Preceded by Grete Waitz |
Women's Half Marathon World Record Holder 1983-09-18 – 1989-03-19 |
Succeeded by Ingrid Kristiansen |
Awards | ||
Preceded by Trish Millines Dziko Bruce Furniss Virginia Gilder Stacey Johnson Gregory Kelser Kellen Winslow |
Silver Anniversary Awards (NCAA) Class of 2005 Mark Johnson Gary Lawrence Paul McDonald Greg Meredith Joan Benoit Samuelson Dave Stoldt |
Succeeded by Valerie Ackerman Danny Ainge Charles Davis Terry Schroeder Mike Singletary Susan Wellington |
Sporting positions | ||
Preceded by Allison Roe |
Women's Fastest Marathon Race 1982 – 1983 |
Succeeded by Ingrid Kristiansen |
Preceded by Rosa Mota |
Chicago Women's Marathon Winner 1985 |
Succeeded by Ingrid Kristiansen |