Lea Haggett

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Lea Haggett
Medal record
Competitor for  Great Britain
World Junior Championships
Bronze 1990 Plovdiv high jump

Lea Haggett-Goodman (born 9 May 1972) is an English former high jumper. She represented Great Britain at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta and won a bronze medal at the 1990 World Junior Championships in Plovdiv. As of 2013, she is still the co-holder of the UK junior record with 1.91 m in 1991.

Career

Haggett was born in Dulwich, London, England and was a member of Croydon Harriers Athletics Club. In 1986, she cleared 1.81 metres as a fourteen-year-old.

In 1990, still only eighteen, Haggett was the UK's number one female high jumper, winning the AAAs National Championships with a personal best of 1.88 m, defeating Olympic finalist Janet Boyle.Then a week later, at the World Junior Championships in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, she again cleared 1.88 m to win the bronze medal. She remains the only British woman to win a medal at the World Junionr Championships in the high jump. She ended the season by competing at the European Championships in Split. As the only British entrant, she managed 1.80 m and was eliminated in the qualifying round.[1]

Haggett began the 1991 season by improving her PB to 1.91 m at a meeting in Chania, Greece on 2 June. Although she would not improve on this for the rest of the year, she had another consistent season. Also in June, she won the UK National Championships title with 1.85 m. In July, she cleared 1.88 m to finish second at the AAAs Championships behind Debbie Marti. Then in August, she cleared 1.89 m for fourth at the European Junior Championships in Thessalonika.

In 1992, at the AAAs Championships, incorporating the Olympic trials, Haggett won her second AAAs title with 1.89 m but failed to earn Olympic selection. Her 1.91 m best from the previous year being one centimetre short of the qualifying standard.

After a year out with injury, Haggett returned in 1994 and earned selection for both the European Championships in Helsinki and the Commonwealth Games in Victoria. At the Europeans, she managed only 1.75 m in qualification. She fared better at the Commonwealth Games, clearing 1.88 m to finish fifth in the final.

In 1995, Haggett was the UK number one for the second time, with a seasons best of 1.90 m. At the AAAs Championships, she won on countback ahead of Diana Davies and Debbie Marti, to earn World Championships selection. All three cleared 1.85 m. At the World Championships in Gothenburg, she cleared 1.75 m and was eliminated in qualification.

Haggett earned Olympic selection in 1996 by achieving her lifetime best of 1.92 m at the AAAs Championships (Olympic trials) in Birmingham.[2] She finished second to Debbie Marti who cleared 1.94. At the Atlanta Olympics, although failing to reach the final, she produced her best jump in a major championships with 1.90 m, defeating Marti, who cleared 1.85 m. As of 2013, Haggett and Marti are the last British woman to compete in an Olympic high jump competition.[3] Atlanta would prove to be Haggett's final major championships.

As of 2013, Haggett's best of 1.92 m from 1996, ranks her equal eighth on the UK all-time list. Her 1.91 m from 1991, when she was nineteen, still stands as the UK junior record.[4] Susan Jones equalled the record in 1997.

Achievements

  • AAAs National Champion (1990, 1995)
  • UK National Champion (1991)
  • AAAs Indoor Champion (1995)
Representing  Great Britain /  England
1990 World Junior Championships Plovdiv, Bulgaria 3rd 1.88 m
European Championships Split, Yugoslavia 17th (q) 1.75 m
1991 European Junior Championships Thessalonika, Greece 4th 1.89 m
1992 European Indoor Championships Genoa, Italy 18th 1.80 m
1994 European Championships Helsinki, Finland 34th (q) 1.75 m
Commonwealth Games Victoria, Canada 5th 1.88 m
1995 World Championships Gothenburg, Sweden 35th (q) 1.75 m
1996 Olympic Games Atlanta, United States 16th (q) 1.90 m

Notes:

  • Results wut a Q, indicate overall position in qualifying round.
  • At the 1996 Olympic Games, Haggett was promoted one position after the disqualification of Antonella Bevilacqua.

References

External links

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