Pauline Elaine Davis-Thompson (born 9 July 1966) is a former Bahamian sprinter. She competed at five Olympics,[1] a rarity for a track and field athlete. She won her first medal at her fourth Olympics and her first gold medals at her fifth Olympics (Sydney 2000) at age 34 in the 4 × 100 m Relay and, after Marion Jones' belated disqualification nine years later, in the 200 m.
In 2022, Davis released her memoirs through Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. Running Sideways: The Olympic Champion Who Made Track and Field History has won two international book awards.
Winner, Autobiography/Memoir, International Book Awards, 2023
Winner, Biography/Autobiography, Track and Field Writers of America (TAFWA) Book Award, 2022
In 2024, Davis signed a publishing deal to have Running Sideways translated and published within China.
Career
In 1984, she was awarded the Austin Sealy Trophy for the
most outstanding athlete of the 1984 CARIFTA Games.[2][3]
Her first high-profile success came in 1989 when she became the NCAA National Champion in the 200-meter dash while setting a collegiate national record as a member of the Alabama Crimson Tide team at the University of Alabama. Then in 1995, she won the silver medal in the 200 metres at the IAAF World Indoor Championships and won another silver, this time in the 400 metres, at the 1995 World Championships in Athletics.
She ran at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics the following year and although she narrowly missed out on a medal in the 400 m, she helped the Bahamian team to a silver medal in the 4 × 100 metres relay. In 1997 she made both the 400 m and 100 m relay finals but failed to win a medal in either event. She received her first World Championships gold medal two years later, in 1999, aiding the Bahamian relay team to victory.
She won a gold medal in both the 200 metres and the 4 × 100 m relay at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. She originally finished in second place in the women's 200 m behind Marion Jones, but on 5 October 2007, Jones admitted to taking performance-enhancing steroids and was stripped of the title. On 9 December 2009, Davis-Thompson was awarded the gold medal.[4]
After her track career, she went into athletics administration, being elected to the IAAF council in 2007.[5]
Personal life
She's married to Jamaican Olympic hurdler (1992) Mark Thompson.[6]
As a teenager, she had to constantly wear a sports bra to deal with her unoptimal physique at the time.[7]
Personal bests
Achievements
Representing the
Bahamas
| Year |
Competition |
Venue |
Position |
Event |
Notes
|
| 1982
|
CARIFTA Games (U-17)
|
Kingston, Jamaica
|
2nd
|
100 m
|
12.19
|
| 2nd
|
200 m
|
25.1
|
Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships (U-17)
|
Bridgetown, Barbados
|
1st
|
100 m
|
11.89
|
| 1st
|
200 m
|
23.90
|
| 1st
|
400 m
|
55.90
|
| 1st
|
Long jump
|
5.22 m
|
| 1983
|
CARIFTA Games (U-20)
|
Fort-de-France, Martinique
|
2nd
|
100 m
|
11.69
|
| 1st
|
200 m
|
23.57
|
| Central American and Caribbean Championships
|
Havana, Cuba
|
2nd
|
100 m
|
11.60
|
| 2nd
|
200 m
|
23.65 (w)
|
| 1st
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
45.26
|
| 1986
|
Central American and Caribbean Games
|
Santiago, Dominican Republic
|
1st
|
100 m
|
11.51
|
| 1st
|
200 m
|
23.06
|
| 2nd
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
45.49
|
| 1987
|
Pan American Games
|
Indianapolis, United States
|
3rd
|
100 m
|
11.47
|
| 3rd
|
200 m
|
22.99
|
| 1989
|
Central American and Caribbean Championships
|
San Juan, Puerto Rico
|
1st
|
100 m
|
11.25
|
| 2nd
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
46.50
|
| 1990
|
Commonwealth Games
|
Auckland, New Zealand
|
3rd
|
100 m
|
11.20 w (+4.4 m/s)
|
| 3rd
|
200 m
|
23.15
|
| 1991
|
World Indoor Championships
|
Seville, Spain
|
5th
|
60 m
|
7.16
|
| World Championships
|
Tokyo, Japan
|
7th
|
200 m
|
22.90 (-2.4 m/s)
|
| 1993
|
IAAF Grand Prix Final
|
Stuttgart, Germany
|
8th
|
100 m
|
11.56
|
| 1994
|
IAAF Grand Prix Final
|
Paris, France
|
7th
|
400 m
|
51.52
|
| 1995
|
World Indoor Championships
|
Barcelona, Spain
|
2nd
|
200 m
|
22.68
|
| World Championships
|
Gothenborg, Sweden
|
2nd
|
400 m
|
49.96
|
| 4th
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
43.14
|
| 1996
|
Olympic Games
|
Atlanta, United States
|
4th
|
400 m
|
49.28
|
| 2nd
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
42.14
|
| 1997
|
World Championships
|
Athens, Greece
|
7th
|
400 m
|
50.68
|
| 6th
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
42.77
|
| 1998
|
IAAF Grand Prix Final
|
Moscow, Russia
|
8th
|
400 m
|
53.83
|
| 1999
|
World Indoor Championships
|
Maebashi, Japan
|
3rd
|
200 m
|
22.70
|
| World Championships
|
Seville, Spain
|
1st
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
41.92
|
| 2000
|
Olympic Games
|
Sydney, Australia
|
1st
|
200 m
|
22.27 (+0.7 m/s)
|
| 1st
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
41.95
|
References
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Pauline Davis-Thompson". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 3 December 2016.
- ^
Carifta Games Magazine, Part 2 (PDF), Carifta Games 2011, archived from the original (PDF) on 25 April 2012, retrieved 12 October 2011
- ^
Carifta Games Magazine, Part 3 (PDF), Carifta Games 2011, archived from the original (PDF) on 25 April 2012, retrieved 12 October 2011
- ^ BBC (8 December 2009). "Katerina Thanou denied Marion Jones' Olympic 100m gold". BBC.co.uk. Retrieved 8 December 2009.
- ^ Congratulations Pauline! - Five Olympic champions now in IAAF Council. IAAF (2009-12-11). Retrieved on 2009-12-12.
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Mark Thompson". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 4 December 2016.
- ^ Wojnarowski, Adrian (29 September 2000). "A bit of foolishness to ease the tension". The Record. Archived from the original on 20 June 2010. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
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Japan Championships in Athletics women's 100 metres champions |
|---|
- 1925: Satoshi Terao
- 1926: Sadako Ishiwata
- 1927–28: Kinue Hitomi
- 1929: Honjo Hatsu
- 1930: Chiyo Yuasa
- 1931–33: Sumiko Watanabe
- 1934: Tsuruko Hattori
- 1935: Sumiko Usui
- 1936: Kikumi Morita
- 1937: Etsuko Komiya
- 1938: Kiyoko Wellta
- 1939–40: Toyoko Yoshino
- 1941: Cancelled
- 1942: Kinuko Hayashi
- 1946–49: Shizuko Inaba
- 1950–51: Ayako Yoshikawa
- 1952: Marjorie Jackson-Nelson
- 1953: Kimiko Okamoto
- 1954–56: Midori Tanaka
- 1957: Kazue Otsuki
- 1958: Yuko Shiojiri
- 1959: Ikuko Yoda
- 1960: Yuko Kobayashi
- 1961: Ikuko Yoda
- 1962: Erika Fisch (FRG)
- 1963: Dorothy Hyman (GBR)
- 1964: Etsuko Miyamoto
- 1965: Masako Nakano
- 1966: Ritsuko Sukegawa
- 1967: Miyoko Tsujishita
- 1968: Miho Sato
- 1969: Ritsuko Sukegawa
- 1970–73: Keiko Yamada
- 1974: Emiko Konishi
- 1975–76: Yukiko Osako
- 1977: Emiko Konishi
- 1978: Keiko Yamada
- 1979: Sumiko Kaibara
- 1980: Yukiko Osako
- 1981: Komimi Isozaki
- 1982–86: Emiko Konishi
- 1987: Mikako Eguchi
- 1988: Etsuko Hara
- 1989: Toshie Iwamoto
- 1990: Miki Madoka
- 1991: (BAH)
- 1992: Ayako Nomura
- 1993: Ayako Nomura
- 1994–96: Toshie Iwamoto
- 1997: Kaori Sakagami
- 1998–2003: Motoko Arai
- 2004: Motoko Arai & Kaori Sakagami
- 2005: Tomoko Ishida
- 2006: Sakie Nobuoka
- 2007: Momoko Takahashi
- 2008: Chisato Fukushima
- 2009: Momoko Takahashi
- 2010–16: Chisato Fukushima
- 2017: Kana Ichikawa
- 2018: Nodoka Seko
- 2019: Midori Mikase
- 2020: Mei Kodama
- 2021: Mei Kodama
- 2022: Arisa Kimishima
- 2023: Arisa Kimishima
- 2024: Arisa Kimishima
|
Japan Championships in Athletics women's 200 metres champions |
|---|
- 1928: Honjo Hatsu
- 1929: Kinue Hitomi
- 1930: Miyoko Hatamaru
- 1931: Kazuko Kashima
- 1932: Mie Muraoka
- 1933: Taka Shibata
- 1934: Masayo Hashimoto
- 1935: Kuriko Hirashima
- 1936: Kikumi Morita
- 1937–38: Kiyoko Itoda
- 1939–40: Fumiko Koshiyama
- 1941: Not held
- 1942: Rie Yamauchi
- 1943–45: Not held
- 1946: Shizuko Inaba
- 1947–49: Shizuko Inaba
- 1950: Kimiko Okamoto
- 1951: Midori Tanaka
- 1952: Marjorie Jackson-Nelson (AUS)
- 1953: Not held
- 1954–56: Midori Tanaka
- 1957: Yoshie Fujii
- 1958: Ikuko Yoda
- 1959–60: Yuko Kobayashi
- 1961–62: Reiko Ito
- 1963: Dorothy Hyman (GBR)
- 1964: Makiko Izawa
- 1965–67: Miyoko Tsujishita
- 1968–69: Ritsuko Ito
- 1970–71: Keiko Yamada
- 1972–73: Yuko Kitabayashi
- 1974: Keiko Yamada
- 1975–76: Yukiko Osako
- 1977–78: Emiko Konishi
- 1979: Sumiko Kaihara
- 1980: Yukiko Osako
- 1981–82: Hiromi Isozaki
- 1983: Emiko Konishi
- 1984–88: Hiromi Isozaki
- 1989: Toshie Iwamoto
- 1990: Ayako Nomura
- 1991: (BAH)
- 1992: Kazue Kakinuma
- 1993: Chiaki Takagi
- 1994–96: Toshie Iwamoto
- 1997: Tomomi Suzuki
- 1998–2003: Motoka Arai
- 2004–08: Sakie Nobuoka
- 2009: Chisato Fukushima
- 2010: Momoko Takahashi
- 2011–16: Chisato Fukushima
- 2017: Kana Ichikawa
- 2018: Chisato Fukushima
- 2019–22: Mei Kodama
- 2023: Arisa Kimishima
- 2024: Arisa Kimishima
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