Sultana Frizell

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Sultana Frizell
Personal information
Born (1984-10-24) October 24, 1984
Perth, Ontario
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight 260 pounds (120 kg)
Sport
Country  Canada
Sport Hammer throw
Club Ottawa Lions
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s) Hammer throw: 75.04 m NR, Tucson, 2012

Sultana Frizell (born 24 October 1984 in Perth, Ontario) is a Canadian track and field athlete competing in the hammer throw. Frizell currently trains under the guidance of Anatoliy Bondarchuk in Kamloops, British Columbia.[1] She competed at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. Frizell is the current Commonwealth Games champion in the hammer throw and Commonwealth Games record holder for the event as well.

Career

Frizell started her athletic career in figure skating before taking up track and field in high school.[2] While attending Perth and District Collegiate Institute, she competed in the shot put, discus, javelin, and hammer throw. She won gold medals in hammer and shot put and silver in discus at 2003 Canadian junior championships. She also took fourth in the hammer and sixth in shot put at 2003 Pan Am junior championships. Although she set a Canadian High School Record in the shot put,[3] she ultimately decided to focus on the hammer throw.

Frizell graduated from high school in 2003 and immediately enrolled at the University of Georgia where she competed for three seasons. In her first season, Frizell showed tremendous improvement. She placed ninth at the NCAA Championships and third at the Canadian Track and Field Championships. She also improved her personal bests in the shot put and javelin. She finished the season with a best of 63.36 meters in the hammer throw. In 2005, Frizell improved her best to 66.42 meters. She improved her placing at both the NCAA Championships and Canadian Championships, finishing sixth and second respectively.

For the 2006 season, Frizell returned to her native Ontario to train. She continued to progress and won her first Canadian national title in 2007. She also qualified for the 2007 Pan American Games where she placed seventh. On November 1, 2007, Frizell relocated to Kamloops, British Columbia to train under the guidance of former world record holder Anatoliy Bondarchuk. During the 2008 season, Frizell broke the Canadian senior women's hammer throw record four times and improved her personal best by over three meters. Her personal best throw of 70.94 meters was in July 2008 at the Canadian Track and Field Championships in Windsor, Ontario.[4] That mark qualified her for the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, where she placed 33rd out of 50 competitors.[5]

Frizell came back even stronger during the 2009 season and set two more national records. She also qualified for her first World Championships final and placed tenth in Berlin at the 12th IAAF World Championships in Athletics.[6] In 2010, she set another national record of 72.24 meters came at the Fränkisch-Crumbach Hammer Meeting in Germany. That mark is the current Canadian hammer throw record. She concluded her season with a gold medal and meet record performance at the Commonwealth Games in Delhi.[7] The following year, Frizell won a silver medal at the 2011 Pan American Games. This event fell on her birthday, thus Frizell was able achieve a personal gift for herself.[8]

Achievements

Representing  Canada
2004 NACAC U23 Championships Sherbrooke, Canada 5th Shot put 13.72 m
3rd Hammer throw 57.38 m
2005 Universiade Izmir, Turkey 13th Shot put 13.30 m
15th (q) Hammer throw 59.03 m
2006 NACAC U23 Championships Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic 3rd Shot put 15.18 m
4th Hammer throw 60.61 m
2007 Pan American Games Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 7th Hammer throw 63.25 m
2008 Olympic Games Beijing, PR China 33rd (q) Hammer throw 65.44 m
2009 World Championships Berlin, Germany 10th Hammer throw 70.88 m
World Athletics Final Thessaloniki, Greece 6th Hammer throw 68.07 m
2010 Commonwealth Games Delhi, India 1st Hammer throw 68.57 m
2011 Pan American Games Guadalajara, Mexico 2nd Hammer throw 70.11 m
2012 Olympic Games London, United Kingdom 26th (q) Hammer throw 67.45 m
2013 World Championships Moscow, Russia 16th (q) Hammer throw 69.06 m
Jeux de la Francophonie Nice, France 4th Hammer throw 67.85 m

References

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