Ana Fidelia Quirot

Medal record
Women's Athletics
Competitor for  Cuba
Olympic Games
Silver 1996 Atlanta 800 m
Bronze 1992 Barcelona 800 m
World Championships
Gold 1995 Gothenburg 800 m
Gold 1997 Athens 800 m
Silver 1991 Tokyo 800 m
Pan American Games
Gold 1987 Indianapolis 400 m
Gold 1987 Indianapolis 800 m
Gold 1991 Havana 400 m
Gold 1991 Havana 800 m
Silver 1991 Havana 4x400 m relay
Central American and Caribbean Games
Gold 1986 Santiago 400 metres
Gold 1986 Santiago 800 metres
Gold 1990 Mexico City 400 metres
Gold 1990 Mexico City 800 metres
Summer Universiade
Gold 1989 Duisburg 800 metres

Ana Fidelia Quirot (born March 23, 1963 in Palma Soriano) is a female athlete from Cuba, who specialised in the 800 m but was also successful over 400 m.

Quirot won a silver medal at the 1991 IAAF World Championships in Athletics and a bronze medal in the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona. However the following year she was involved in a horrific domestic accident that left her seriously injured. She was pregnant at the time and gave birth to her daughter prematurely in hospital while fighting for her life. Her daughter did not survive and died a week after she was born.

She returned from her accident in late 1993 and won a silver medal in the Central America Games, behind the Surinam athlete Letitia Vriesde. She had international success in the following years too: she won a gold medal at the 1995 IAAF World Championships in Athletics in Sweden and again in 1997 in Athens. She also won a silver at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta.

She is one of only a handful of female athletes who have run under 1 minute and 55 seconds for 800 m: her best time of 1:54.44 was set when winning the IAAF World Cup in Barcelona in 1989 and she also ran 1:54.82 to beat Maria de Lurdes Mutola in a Grand Prix race in Cologne in 1997. Her personal best time ranks her as the fourth fastest 800 m runner of all time.[1] Her personal best for 400 m is 49.61. She also holds the world best for the unofficial distance of 600 metres.

References

External links and sources

Awards
Preceded by
Florence Griffith-Joyner
Women's Track & Field Athlete of the Year
1989
Succeeded by
Merlene Ottey