Hollis Conway (born January 8, 1967) is a track and field high jumper and a two-time Olympic medalist. He is currently employed by Lafayette Consolidated Government as the PARC Director in Lafayette Mayor-President Josh Guillory's administration. Conway previously served as the assistant director of Diversity, Leadership, & Education for the Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns football team under head coach Billy Napier. Conway was the top-ranked high jumper in the U.S. seven straight years from 1988 to 1994 and in the world for two of those years (1990 and 1991). Conway, John Thomas and Dwight Stones are the only Americans to win two Olympic medals in the high jump.
Career
Born in Chicago, Illinois and a native of Shreveport, Louisiana, Conway went 7-8¾ in the event at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, Korea, setting a U.S. collegiate record and earning a silver medal. He won a bronze medal in the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain after going 7-8½ in winning the U.S. Olympic Team Trials that year.
In 1989, Conway broke the American record twice in the high jump, winning the NCAA Men's Outdoor Track and Field Championship at 7-9¾ and the U.S. Olympic Festival at 7–10. He earned his first of two world No. 1 rankings in 1990 when he swept both the U.S. indoor and outdoor titles and won the Goodwill Games. He had ten jumps of 7-8 or better that year.
A six-time NCAA All-American and three-time NCAA champion at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette (then known as the University of Southwestern Louisiana).[1] He established a new NCAA indoor record of 2.37 m (7 ft 9+1⁄2 in) at the 1989 NCAA Indoor Championships: it remains as one of the longest-standing NCAA, and Championship Meet, records through 2011. He won the winner at the 1988 NCAA Men's Outdoor Track and Field Championship and at the 1989 he won with an American outdoor record height. Conway was ranked No. 1 in the world in 1991 by winning the IAAF World Indoor Championships in Athletics in Seville, Spain, with an American indoor record of 7-10½.[2]
He defended his U.S. outdoor championship and won the 1991 World University Games, while finishing third in the 1991 Pan American Games and World Outdoor Championships. He also won the British AAA Championships title at the 1991 AAA Championships.[3][4]the He was ranked third in the world in 1992 and 1993. He was a Goodwill Games runner-up in 1994.
In all, Conway won ten USA championship high jump titles (five outdoor, five indoor) before his retirement at the 2000 Drake Relays (where he jumped 6 ft 9in, on 29 April 2000).[5] He is a member of the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame and was inducted into the Drake Relays Hall of Fame in 1999. Conway wrote the foreword of the Complete Book of Jumps (Human Kinetics Europe Ltd, 1995).[6]
His IAAF biography also credits Conway with a personal best in the triple jump of 16.17 m (53 ft 1⁄2 in), which is an international-class distance (especially given that he likely did not practice this event very often).
Conway was inducted into the USTFCCCA Collegiate Athlete Hall of Fame in 2024.[7]
Height differential
Conway jumped off his left foot and is considered short in stature, in comparison to other world-class high jumpers, many of whom stand 6'3"-to-6'5". His personal details on file with the IAAF officially list his height and weight as 1.83m and 68 kg, which equate to 6 feet one-quarter inch, and 150 pounds. However, in a high jump instructional video produced in 1991, which features Conway and his coach, Dick Booth, the narrator states Conway is "six feet one-half inch" (1.84m) and weighs "one hundred forty-five pounds". The narrator also says Conway has "average" speed, running 10.8 seconds for 100 meters, as well as having only an "average" vertical leap of 31 inches.[8] At six feet tall, Conway has held a distinction with four others in track and field history for jumping over their own heights. Conway's best jump was 22+1⁄4 inches (57 cm) above his head.[9]
International competitions
| Year |
Competition |
Venue |
Position |
Notes
|
Representing the United States
|
| 1986
|
World Junior Championships
|
Athens, Greece
|
2nd
|
2.22 m
|
| 1988
|
Summer Olympics
|
Seoul, South Korea
|
2nd
|
2.36 m
|
| 1989
|
Universiade
|
Duisburg, West Germany
|
2nd
|
2.31 m
|
| 1990
|
Goodwill Games
|
Seattle, United States
|
1st
|
2.33 m
|
| 1991
|
World Indoor Championships
|
Seville, Spain
|
1st
|
2.40 m
|
| Universiade
|
Sheffield, United Kingdom
|
1st
|
2.37 m
|
| Pan American Games
|
Havana, Cuba
|
3rd
|
2.32 m
|
| World Championships in Athletics
|
Tokyo, Japan
|
3rd
|
2.36 m
|
| 1992
|
Summer Olympics
|
Barcelona, Spain
|
3rd
|
2.34 m
|
| 1994
|
Goodwill Games
|
Saint Petersburg, Russia
|
2nd
|
2.28 m
|
References
External links
|
|---|
- 1959:
Cornel Porumb (ROU)
- 1961:
Valeriy Brumel (URS)
- 1963:
Valeriy Brumel (URS)
- 1965:
Valeriy Skvortsov (URS)
- 1967:
Miodrag Todosijević (YUG)
- 1970:
Valentin Gavrilov (URS)
- 1973:
Vladimír Malý (TCH)
- 1975:
Enzo Del Forno (ITA)
- 1977:
Jacek Wszoła (POL)
- 1979:
Gerd Nagel (FRG)
- 1981:
Leo Williams (USA)
- 1983:
Igor Paklin (URS)
- 1985:
Igor Paklin (URS)
- 1987:
James Lott (USA)
- 1989:
Javier Sotomayor (CUB)
- 1991:
(USA)
- 1993:
Tony Barton (USA)
- 1995:
Dragutin Topić (YUG)
- 1997:
Lee Jin-taek (KOR)
- 1999:
Ben Challenger (GBR)
- 2001:
Aleksandr Kravtsov (RUS)
- 2003:
Emilian Kaszczyk (POL)
- 2005:
Aleksander Waleriańczyk (POL)
- 2007:
Aleksandr Shustov (RUS)
- 2009:
Eduard Malchenko (RUS)
- 2011:
Bohdan Bondarenko (UKR)
- 2013:
Sergey Mudrov (RUS)
- 2015:
Daniil Tsyplakov (RUS)
- 2017:
Falk Wendrich (GER)
- 2019:
Tihomir Ivanov (BUL)
- 2021:
Vladyslav Lavskyy (UKR)
- 2025:
Yonathan Kapitolnik (ISR)
|
|
|---|
| Standing high jump | |
|---|
| High jump |
- 1906: Herbert Gidney
- 1907: Harry Porter
- 1908: Harry Porter
- 1909: Harry Porter
- 1910: Harry Grumpelt
- 1911: Samuel Lawrence
- 1913: John Johnstone
- 1914: Eugene Jennings
- 1915: Wesley Oler
- 1916: Jo Loomis
- 1917: Jo Loomis
- 1918: Egon Erickson
- 1919: Walter Whalen
- 1920: Walter Whalen
- 1921: Richmond Landon
- 1922: Leroy Brown
- 1923: Harold Osborn
- 1924: Harold Osborn
- 1925: Harold Osborn
- 1926: Harold Osborn
- 1927: Charles W. Major
- 1928: Anton Burg
- 1929: Charles W. Major
- 1930: Anton Burg
- 1931: Anton Burg
- 1932: George Spitz
- 1933: George Spitz
- 1934: Walter Marty, George Spitz
- 1935: Cornelius Johnson
- 1936: Ed Burke
- 1937: Ed Burke
- 1938: Lloyd Thompson
- 1939: Mel Walker
- 1940: Arthur Byrnes
- 1941: Mel Walker
- 1942: Adam Berry, Josh Williamson
- 1943: Bill Vessie, Josh Williamson
- 1944: Dave Albritton, Bill Vessie
- 1945: Ken Wiesner, Josh Williamson
- 1946: John Vislocky
- 1947: John Vislocky
- 1948: John Vislocky
- 1949: Dick Phillips
- 1950: John Vislocky
- 1951: John Heintzmann, Jack Razetto, Josh Williamson
- 1952: Lewis Hall
- 1953: Lewis Hall
- 1954: Herman Wyatt
- 1955: Lewis Hall, Ernie Shelton
- 1956: Ernie Shelton
- 1957: Phil Reavis
- 1958: Herman Wyatt
- 1959: John Thomas
- 1960: John Thomas
- 1961:
Valeriy Brumel (URS), John Thomas (2nd)
- 1962: John Thomas
- 1963:
Valeriy Brumel (URS), John Thomas (2nd)
- 1964: John Thomas
- 1965:
Valeriy Brumel (URS), Gene Johnson (3rd)
- 1966: John Thomas
- 1967: John Rambo
- 1968:
Valentin Gavrilov (URS), Steve Kelly (2nd)
- 1969: John Rambo
- 1970: Otis Burrell
- 1971: Reynaldo Brown
- 1972: Gene White
- 1973: Dwight Stones
- 1974: Tom Woods
- 1975: Dwight Stones
- 1976:
Robert Forget (CAN), Bill Knoedel (2nd)
- 1977: Paul Underwood
- 1978: Dwight Stones
- 1979: Benn Fields
- 1980: Franklin Jacobs
- 1981: Jeff Woodard
- 1982: Dwight Stones
- 1983: Tyke Peacock
- 1984: Dennis Lewis
- 1985: Jim Howard
- 1986: Jim Howard
- 1987:
Igor Paklin (URS), Jim Howard (2nd)
- 1988:
Igor Paklin (URS), Jim Howard (2nd), Tom McCants (2nd)
- 1989:
Troy Kemp (BAH), Tom McCants (2nd)
- 1990:
- 1991:
Javier Sotomayor (CUB), (2nd)
- 1992:
- 1993:
- 1994:
- 1995: Tony Barton
- 1996: Charles Austin
- 1997: Charles Austin
- 1998: Sam Hill
- 1999: Henry Patterson
- 2000: Matt Hemingway
- 2001: Nathan Leeper
- 2002: Nathan Leeper
- 2003: Charles Austin
- 2004: Jamie Nieto
- 2005: Tora Harris
- 2006: Adam Shunk
- 2007: Tora Harris
- 2008: Andra Manson
- 2009: Andra Manson
- 2010: Jesse Williams
- 2011: Jesse Williams
- 2012: Jesse Williams
- 2013: Dusty Jonas
- 2014: Erik Kynard
- 2015: Erik Kynard
- 2016: Erik Kynard
- 2017: Erik Kynard
- 2018: Erik Kynard
- 2019: Jeron Robinson
- 2020: Erik Kynard
- 2022: JuVaughn Harrison
- 2023: Shelby McEwen
- 2024: Shelby McEwen
|
|---|
| Notes | |
|---|
|
|---|
1876–1878 New York Athletic Club | |
|---|
1879–1888 NAAAA |
- 1879: William Wunder
- 1880: Alfred Carroll
- 1881: C.W. Durand
- 1882: Alfred Carroll
- 1883: Malcolm Ford
- 1884: J.T. Rinehart
- 1885–87: William Page
- 1888Note 1: Tim O'Connor
|
|---|
1888–1979 Amateur Athletic Union |
- 1888Note 1: Daniel Webster
- 1889: R.K. Pritchard
- 1890–91: Alvah Nickerson
- 1892–95: Mike Sweeney
- 1896: Charles Powell
- 1897–1900: Irving Baxter
- 1901: Sam Jones
- 1902: Irving Baxter
- 1903-4: Sam Jones
- 1905: Herbert Kerrigan
- 1906: Neil Patterson
- 1907: Con Leahy
- 1908: Harry Porter
- 1909: Egon Erickson
- 1910: Walter Thomason
- 1911: Harry Grumpelt/Harry Porter
- 1912: John Johnstone
- 1913: Alma Richards
- 1914: Jo Loomis
- 1915: George Horine
- 1916: Wes Oler
- 1917: Clint Larsen
- 1918: Carl Rice
- 1919–20OT: John Murphy
- 1921–22: Dewey Alberts
- 1923: LeRoy Brown
- 1924: Robert Juday
- 1925–26: Harold Osborn
- 1927: Robert King
- 1928OT: Robert King/Charles McGinnis
- 1929: Henry Lassalette
- 1930–31: Anton Burg
- 1932OT: Cornelius Johnson/George Spitz/Robert van Osdel
- 1933: Cornelius Johnson
- 1934: Cornelius Johnson/Walter Marty
- 1935: Cornelius Johnson
- 1936: Cornelius Johnson/Dave Albritton
- 1937: Dave Albritton
- 1938: Mel Walker/Dave Albritton
- 1939–40: Les Steers
- 1941: Bill Stewart
- 1942: Adam Berry
- 1943: Pete Watkins
- 1944: Fred Sheffield/Willard Smith
- 1945: Dave Albritton/Lester Howe/Richard Schnacke/Joshua Williamson
- 1946–47: Dave Albritton
- 1948: Tom Schofield
- 1949: Dick Phillips
- 1950: Dave Albritton/Jack Heitzman/Jack Razzeto/Virgil Severns
- 1951: Lewis Hall
- 1952–53: Walt Davis
- 1954: Ernie Shelton
- 1955: Charles Dumas/Ernie Shelton
- 1956–59: Charles Dumas
- 1960: John Thomas
- 1961: Bob Avant
- 1962: John Thomas
- 1963: Gene Johnson
- 1964: Ed Caruthers
- 1965–67: Otis Burrell
- 1968: Ed Hanks
- 1969: Otis Burrell
- 1970–71: Reynaldo Brown
- 1972: Barry Schur
- 1973–74: Dwight Stones
- 1975: Tom Woods
- 1976–78: Dwight Stones
- 1979: Franklin Jacobs
|
|---|
1980–1992 The Athletics Congress |
- 1980: Franklin Jacobs
- 1981: Tyke Peacock
- 1982: Milt Ottey
- 1983: Dwight Stones
- 1984: Jim Howard
- 1985: Brian Stanton
- 1986: Doug Nordquist
- 1987: Jerome Carter
- 1988: Doug Nordquist
- 1989: Brian Brown
- 1990–92OT:
|
|---|
1993-onwards USA Track & Field | |
|---|
| Notes |
- Note 1: In 1888 both the NAAAA and the AAU held championships
- OT: The 1920, 1928, 1932 and since 1992, championships incorporated the Olympic Trials, otherwise held as a discrete event.
- 2020 OT: The 2020 Olympic Trials were delayed and held in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
|
|---|
|
|---|
| Qualification | | |
|---|
Men's track and road athletes | |
|---|
Men's field athletes | |
|---|
Women's track and road athletes | |
|---|
Women's field athletes | |
|---|
| Coaches |
- Stan Huntsman (men's head coach)
- Dean Hayes (men's assistant coach)
- Irving "Moon" Mondschein (men's assistant coach)
- Tom Pagani (men's assistant coach)
- Russ Rogers (men's assistant coach)
- Joe Vigil (men's assistant coach)
- Terry Crawford (women's head coach)
- Ken Foreman (women's assistant coach)
- Dave Rodda (women's assistant coach)
- Fred Thompson (women's assistant coach)
|
|---|
|
|---|
| Qualification |
- 1992 United States Olympic trials (track and field)
| |
|---|
Men's track and road athletes | |
|---|
Men's field athletes | |
|---|
Women's track and road athletes | |
|---|
Women's field athletes |
- Paula Berry
- Kym Carter
- Sharon Couch
- Bonnie Dasse
- Pam Dukes
- Sheila Echols
- Carla Garrett
- Cindy Greiner
- Tanya Hughes
- Jackie Joyner-Kersee
- Donna Mayhew
- Penny Neer
- Ramona Pagel
- Connie Price-Smith
- Sue Rembao
- Amber Welty
|
|---|
| Coaches |
- Mel Rosen (men's head coach)
- Harry Groves (men's assistant coach)
- Erv Hunt (men's assistant coach)
- Ed Jacoby (men's assistant coach)
- Bill Moultrie (men's assistant coach)
- Fred Samara (men's assistant coach)
- Barbara Jacket (women's head coach)
- Dorothy Doolittle (women's assistant coach)
- Lance Harter (women's assistant coach)
- Bert Lyle (women's assistant coach)
|
|---|
USTFCCCA Collegiate Track & Field/Cross Country Athlete Hall of Fame |
|---|
| Class of 2022 | | |
|---|
| Class of 2023 | |
|---|
| Class of 2024 | |
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| Authority control databases: People | |
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