Medal record | ||
Jana Pittman |
||
Women's athletics | ||
---|---|---|
World Championships | ||
Gold | 2003 Paris | 400 m hurdles |
Gold | 2007 Osaka | 400 m hurdles |
Commonwealth Games | ||
Gold | 2002 Manchester | 400 m hurdles |
Gold | 2002 Manchester | 4 x 400 m |
Gold | 2006 Melbourne | 400 m hurdles |
Gold | 2006 Melbourne | 4 x 400 m |
World Junior Champs | ||
Gold | 2000 Santiago | 400 m |
Gold | 2000 Santiago | 400 m hurdles |
World Youth Champs | ||
Gold | 1999 Bydgoszcz | 400 m hurdles |
Jana Pittman-Rawlinson (born 9 November 1982 in Sydney) is an Australian athlete, who specialises in the 400 metres run and 400 metre hurdles events. She is a two-time world champion in the 400 m hurdles, from 2003 and 2007. She also won the gold medal in this event at the 2002 and 2006 Commonwealth Games and was part of Australia's winning 4 x 400 metres relay teams at both events.
Contents |
Pittman attended Matthew Pearce Primary School and Mount Saint Benedict College in North Western Sydney. She is second cousin to diver Melissa Wu.[1] She competed until April 2006 under her maiden name Pittman, then under her married name Rawlinson, and in 2009, following the breakdown of her marriage, as Pittman-Rawlinson.
Pittman won the 400 m hurdles at the 1999 World Youth Championships in Athletics in Bydgoszcz and became treble champion in 200 m, 400 m and 400 m hurdles at the national championships of that year. In 2000, she became the first woman ever to win the 400 m flat and hurdles double at any IAAF or IOC championships - in this case, the 2000 World Junior Championships in Santiago (Chile).
Just before the Athens Olympics, Pittman tore her cartilage in her right knee during a warm-up for a track meet in Zurich, where she had been favored to win the 400 m hurdles event. After undergoing surgery in London only one week before the start of the games, she ran 5th in the final. [2]
On 10 March 2006, quoted in an article in The Sydney Morning Herald, Pittman announced her intention to leave Australia, possibly for the UK, after the negative publicity surrounding her knee and her disagreement with fellow athlete Tamsyn Lewis: "Since Athens, my image is all about drama and I hate it." Pittman said there had been a "mixed" response from the Australian public since the media dubbed their rivalry a "catfight" and a "bitchfight". She related that when she had been walking down the street a week earlier, a group of men in a car yelled out, "We love you, Tamsyn, we hate you, Pitts". "I didn't create that", the 400 m hurdler was quoted as saying. "I didn't want that". She also referenced the current edition of Ralph magazine at the time, in which Lewis posed in a bikini and which carried the tag line on the cover, "It's alright Tam, we don't like Jana Pittman either".
In the buildup to her races at the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne, Pittman was widely reported as being nervous about the possible crowd reaction in the wake of the negative publicity. However, the ovation of the home crowd was loud and long, both before and after the 400 m hurdles Final, and in interviews afterwards Pittman expressed her feelings of relief. The crowd response was strikingly different at a nightclub hosting post-games celebrations, where after an introduction she was booed off the stage.[3]
At the Melbourne Commonwealth Games Jana Pittman successfully defended her two Commonwealth titles.
As at the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester, Pittman-Rawlinson was a member of Australia's gold medal-winning 4 x 400 m relay team (with Tamsyn Lewis, Caitlin Willis and Rosemary Hayward). However, the 2006 Aussie team was awarded the gold medal after the disqualification of the England team for a baton-change violation.[4] Pittman later wrote a letter of apology to the English team and offered her gold medal to them. She blamed the disqualification on Lewis who, alongside Pittman, went up to the officials after the race to point out the violation of Englishwoman Natasha Danvers-Smith of taking an incorrect position on the starting leg.[5] According to the ABC Sports Desk[6] the officials were moving to disqualify England anyway. England head coach, Brad McStravick, in an interview with the ABC TV program Offsiders, questioned Pittman's motivation for writing the letter: "I know she is going to spend, well, at least half the year in England and I think some of the girls wondered whether it was just to try and make peace, so that she wouldn't face any animosity once she was living and training in England," he said.[7]
Pittman won the 400 m hurdles title with a new Games record time of 53.82 seconds. This was her first major championship in the event since her 2004 knee injury and subsequent stress fractures in her back.
After delivering Cornelis, Pittman had her wisdom teeth removed and a 10-week injury break with plantar fasciitis. Despite these difficulties, she ran well on the European circuit and comfortably won the 400 m Hurdles at the Osaka World Championships.
She carried a slight injury through her 2007 season, having surgery later in the year to remove loose cartilage and floating bone fragments in the second toe of her right foot.
Pittman was pre-selected for the 2008 Australian Olympic team in late 2007.
In January 2008, Pittman was nominated for 'Comeback of the Year' at the Laureus World Sports Awards.
In February 2008, Pittman was quoted as saying she could visualise her win at the Beijing Olympics and that she would run a world record time. But on 9 July 2008, Pittman announced she would not be competing at the Beijing Games, because of the complications with the toe injury.[8] The Australian subsequently reported that a large number of Australians had "viciously turned against the fallen track star", strongly criticising her.[9]
On 29 June 2009, Pittman returned to racing after more than a year with a victory in the Grand Prix event at Malaga, Spain. She won the 400 metre hurdles in a time of 55.67 seconds ahead of Ukrainian Anastasiya Rabchenyuk and Janet Wienand of South Africa.[10] However, she was not fit enough to defend her title at the 2009 World Championships. A hamstring problem caused by bulging disc in her back interrupted her preparation for the tournament, but she was confident of a return, saying "I hope I can recover from this latest setback and get back on track for my long term goal and dream - winning Olympic Gold in London in 2012".[11]
Another 20 months passed before her return to competition. In April 2011, she beat domestic rival Lauren Boden on the final leg of the Australian Athletics Tour.[12]
In May 2009 it was revealed that Pittman had undergone breast implant surgery.[13] The following year she announced she'd had the implants removed as they had "affected her running", but would consider having her breasts augmented again once her athletic career was over. [14]
On 31 March 2006, Pittman married English athlete Chris Rawlinson at Morningstar Estate on the Mornington Peninsula, Victoria. Rawlinson, also a specialist 400 m hurdler, coached Jana from 2004 - 2009. On 14 December 2006 she gave birth to the couple's first child, son Cornelis Levi. She later stated that she had gone for a hard twenty-minute run on the morning of the birth and "felt like a whale".
In April 2009 it was announced that Pittman and Rawlinson has separated after three years of marriage and in May 2009 she returned to training under Craig Hilliard who had previously coached her.[15] In an interview on 24 October 2009 her new role as a single mother was described as "Jana's toughest hurdle".[16]
In January 2010 it was announced that Pittman had been reconciled with Rawlinson and that they would remarry.[14] On 31 March 2010, Pittman remarried Rawlinson in England, wearing an unconventional red wedding dress.[17] However, on 16 April 2011 it was announced that Pittman and Rawlinson had split again.[18]
|
|