Nathan Deakes
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| Born | (1977-08-17) 17 August 1977 |
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| Height | 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) |
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| Weight | 66 kg (146 lb) |
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| Country | Australia |
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| Sport | Athletics |
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| Event | 50km Race Walk |
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Nathan Deakes (born 17 August 1977 in Geelong) is an Australian former race walker. Deakes trained with the Australian Institute of Sport.
By performances, Deakes is Australia's best and most successful ever race walker, winning several international medals and holding many Australian and World Records. He was the 2006 Australian Male Athlete of the year, Australia's most prestigious sporting award across all sports.[1]
He won a bronze medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, and is a four-time Commonwealth Games gold medallist. He won gold in the 20 km walk and 50 km walk events at both the 2002 Manchester Games and the 2006 Melbourne Games, becoming the first man to win both the 20 km and 50 km walks at two consecutive Commonwealth Games. He also won bronze medals at the 1998 Kuala Lumpur Games and the 1996 World Junior Championships. He was also among the leading duo at the Athens Olympics in the 50 km walk, until being disqualified. He won the gold medal at the 2007 World Championships in Osaka in the 50 km walk.[2]
To cap off a successful 2007, Deakes was crowned 2007 Telstra Male Athlete of the Year for the second time (the first being in 2004).
He also broke the 50 km walk world record on 2 December 2006 at the Australian 50 km Road Walking Championships in Geelong, recording a time of 3:35.47. This bettered race walking great Robert Korzeniowski's previous world record of 3:36.03. He is also 4th all-time for the 20 km walk, 1:17.33, and 7th all-time for the 20,000m walk, 1:19.47.[2]
Deakes also won the last edition of the Goodwill Games in Brisbane 2001. He beat a strong field consisting of the current Olympic Champion, Robert Korzeniowski, and the then current World Champion, Roman Rasskazov.
On 21 July 2008 Deakes announced that he would withdraw from the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, with a hamstring tendon injury that required surgery to repair.
His last competitive outing came at the 2012 London Olympics, where he competed despite a year riddled with injury and finished 19th in the 50 km walk. He retired from the sport officially in February 2013,[3] and became a Board Member soon after for Athletics AustraliaIn 2018 he was appointed as a member of the Athletics Integrity Unit Anti-Doping Panel.
Deakes has completed university academic qualifications with a double degree in Banking & Finance and Law (Honours) from the University of Canberra, a Graduate Diploma in Legal Practice from the Australian National University and a Masters in Law with a Sports Law specialisation from the University of Melbourne. He is published in the area of sports integrity.[2]
Inaugural inductee to University of Canberra Sport Walk of Fame in 2022.[4]
References
External links
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20 kilometres (1998–2018) | |
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10,000 metres (2022–present) | |
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20 miles (1966–1974) |
- 1966:
Ron Wallwork (ENG)
- 1970:
Noel Freeman (AUS)
- 1974:
John Warhurst (ENG)
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30 kilometres (1978-1994) |
- 1978:
Olly Flynn (ENG)
- 1982:
Steve Barry (WAL)
- 1986:
Simon Baker (AUS)
- 1990:
Guillaume LeBlanc (CAN)
- 1994:
Nicholas A'Hern (AUS)
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50 kilometres (1998-2006) |
- 1998:
Saravanan Govindasamy (MAS)
- 2002:
(AUS)
- 2006:
(AUS)
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- 1948 – 1959: Ted Allsopp
- 1961: Ronald Crawford
- 1963: Noel Freeman
- 1965 – 1968: Bob Gardiner
- 1967 – 1969: Frank Clark
- 1970: Noel Freeman
- 1972 – 1974: Peter Fullager
- 1976 – 1978: Willi Sawall
- 1980: Peter Fullager
- 1982: Willi Sawall
- 1983 – 1984: Dave Smith
- 1985: Simon Baker
- 1986: Not Held
- 1987: Dave Smith
- 1988: Simon Baker
- 1989: Rod Huxley
- 1990: Andrew Jachno
- 1991: Dave Smith
- 1992: Robert McFadden
- 1993: Paul Copeland
- 1994: Not Held
- 1995 – 1998: Nicholas A'Hern
- 1999: Dion Russell
- 2000 – 2002:
- 2003: Luke Adams
- 2004 – 2006:
- 2007: Luke Adams
- 2008 – 2013: Jared Tallent
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- 1952: Len Chadwick
- 1954: Les Hellyer
- 1956: Norman Read (NZL)
- 1958: Ted Allsopp
- 1960: Noel Freeman
- 1962: Ted Allsopp
- 1964 – 1968: Bob Gardiner
- 1970: Ted Allsopp
- 1971: Bob Gardiner
- 1973: Robin Whyte
- 1975: Tim Erickson
- 1977: Willi Sawall
- 1979: Bruce Cook
- 1981: Willi Sawall
- 1983: Keith Knox
- 1984: Andrew Jachno
- 1985: Mark Dossetor
- 1986: Willi Sawall
- 1987: Steve Hausfeld
- 1988: Michael Harvey
- 1989: Simon Baker
- 1990: Michael Harvey
- 1991: Dariusz Wojcik
- 1992: Willi Sawall
- 1993 – 1994: Michael Harvey
- 1995: Duane Cousins
- 1996: Michael Harvey
- 1997 – 1998: Dion Russell
- 1999: Dion Russell and
- 2000: Not Held
- 2003: Duane Cousins
- 2004: Chris Erickson
- 2005 – 2006:
- 2007: Jared Tallent
- 2008: Chris Erickson
- 2009: Jared Tallent
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| 20 km walk |
- 1980: Domingo Colín (MEX)
- 1981: Dave Smith (AUS)
- 1982: Willi Sawall (AUS)
- 1983: Jozef Pribilinec (TCH)
- 1984: Ernesto Canto (MEX)
- 1985: Dave Smith (AUS)
- 1986: Reima Salonen (FIN)
- 1987: Axel Noack (GDR)
- 1988: Mikhail Shchennikov (URS)
- 1989: Yevgeniy Misyulya (URS)
- 1990: Pavol Blažek (TCH)
- 1991: Aleksandr Pershin (URS)
- 1992: Stefan Johansson (SWE)
- 1993: Bernardo Segura (MEX)
- 1994: Bernardo Segura (MEX)
- 1995: Vladimir Andreyev (RUS)
- 1996: Yevgeniy Misyulya (BLR)
- 1997: Jefferson Pérez (ECU)
- 1998: Vladimir Andreyev (RUS)
- 1999: Julio René Martínez (GUA)
- 2000: Roman Rasskazov (RUS)
- 2001: Dmitriy Yesipchuk (RUS)
- 2002: Paquillo Fernández (ESP)
- 2003: Jefferson Pérez (ECU)
- 2004: Vladimir Stankin (RUS)
- 2005: (AUS)
- 2006: Li Gaobo (CHN)
- 2007: Vladimir Kanaykin (RUS)
- 2008: Sergey Morozov (RUS)
- 2009: Valeriy Borchin (RUS)
- 2010: Alex Schwazer (ITA)
- 2011: Wang Zhen (CHN)
- 2012: Alex Schwazer (ITA)
- 2013: Petr Trofimov (RUS)
- 2014: Yusuke Suzuki (JPN)
- 2015: Yusuke Suzuki (JPN)
- 2016: Eiki Takahashi (JPN)
- 2017: Wang Kaihua (CHN)
- 2018: Sergey Shirobokov (RUS)
- 2019: Toshikazu Yamanishi (JPN)
- 2020: Toshikazu Yamanishi (JPN)
- 2021: Wang Kaihua (CHN)
- 2022: Vasiliy Mizinov (ANA)
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| 50 km walk |
- 1980: José Marín (ESP)
- 1981: Uwe Dünkel (GDR)
- 1982: Ronald Weigel (GDR)
- 1983: José Marín (ESP)
- 1984: Ronald Weigel (GDR)
- 1985: Andrey Perlov (URS)
- 1986: Ronald Weigel (GDR)
- 1987: Andrey Perlov (URS)
- 1988: Vyacheslav Ivanenko (URS)
- 1989: Andrey Perlov (URS)
- 1990: Aleksandr Potashov (URS)
- 1991: Carlos Mercenario (MEX)
- 1992: Robert Korzeniowski (POL)
- 1993: Jesús Ángel García (ESP)
- 1994: Valentí Massana (ESP)
- 1995: Zhao Yongsheng (CHN)
- 1996: Thierry Toutain (FRA)
- 1997: Jesús Ángel García (ESP)
- 1998: Andrey Plotnikov (RUS)
- 1999: Sergey Korepanov (KAZ)
- 2000: Valeriy Spitsyn (RUS)
- 2001: Robert Korzeniowski (POL)
- 2002: Robert Korzeniowski (POL)
- 2003: Robert Korzeniowski (POL)
- 2004: Denis Nizhegorodov (RUS)
- 2005: Yu Chaohong (CHN)
- 2006: (AUS)
- 2007: Alex Schwazer (ITA)
- 2008: Denis Nizhegorodov (RUS)
- 2009: Sergey Kirdyapkin (RUS)
- 2010: Yohann Diniz (FRA)
- 2011: Sergey Bakulin (RUS)
- 2012: Sergey Kirdyapkin (RUS)
- 2013: Robert Heffernan (IRL)
- 2014: Yohann Diniz (FRA)
- 2015: Matej Tóth (SVK)
- 2016: Yohann Diniz (FRA)
- 2017: Yohann Diniz (FRA)
- 2018: Tomohiro Noda (JPN)
- 2019: Masatora Kawano (JPN)
- 2020: Matej Tóth (SVK)
- 2021: Satoshi Maruo (JPN)
- 2022: Resham Midhun (IND)
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- Sean Wroe
- Jeff Riseley
- Ben St Lawrence
- Liam Gander
- Mitchell Watt
- John Steffensen
- Luke Adams
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- Craig Mottram
- Jeff Hunt
- Youcef Abdi
- Anthony Alozie
- Matt Davies
- Aaron Rouge-Serret
- Isaac Ntiamoah
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| Authority control databases: People | |
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