- Debbie Brill
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Debbie Brill Personal information Full name Debbie Arden Brill Born March 10, 1953
Mission, British ColumbiaSport Sport High jump College/university team Unaffiliated Achievements and titles World finals First International competition in 1968, at age 15. Regional finals Started competing provincially in British Columbia in 1966, at age 13 National finals First competed on a Canadian National level in 1967, at age 14 Olympic finals Competed in the Olympic Games in 1972, 1976, and 1984. Qualified for the 1980 Olympic Games in 1980 subsequently boycotted by Canada.
IAAF rankingsIAAF World Indoor Games
Rank: 3
Height: 1.90 m.
Locale: Paris
Date: 19/01/1985
23rd Olympic GamesRank: 5
Height: 1.94
Locale: Los Angeles, CA
Date: 10/08/1984
20th Olympic GamesRank: 8
Height: 1.82
Locale: München
Date: 04/09/1972 [1]
In 1979, the year before the 1980 Olympics, Debbie was ranked No. 1 in the world by the American magazine -"Track and Field News"
("The bible of the sport since 1948").[2]Highest world ranking First place in the world rankings 1979 Personal best(s) 1.99 meters indoors at The Edmonton Journal Games in 1982, 1.98 meters outdoors in 1984 in Rieti, Italy Debbie Brill OC (born March 10, 1953 in Mission, British Columbia) is a Canadian high jump athlete who was the first North American woman to clear 6 feet, at age 16. Her unique reverse jumping style was called the "Brill Bend". She is an eleven-time national champion of Canada.
Debbie has held the Canadian National High Jump record, both indoor (1.99 meters - 6' 6½ ") and outdoor (1.98 meters - 6' 6"), since 1969, establishing her first Canadian High Jump record when she was 16 years old. Her Canadian High Jump records remain unbroken. She was ranked in the top 8 female jumpers in the world for 12 years in a career that spanned 21 years, from 1967–1988. Debbie's jump, outdoors, of 1.98 m. in 1984 would have tied the 5th highest jump by a woman in an outdoors meet in the summer (August) of 2010.
In 1979 Debbie won a gold medal in the World Cup athletics championship (the precursor to the World Athletics Championships) held in Montreal, Canada.
Debbie was ranked number one in the world by Track and Field News going into the 1980 Olympics which Canada boycotted because of the U.S.S.R.'s military involvement in Afghanistan.
In January 1982 Debbie established a World Indoor High Jump record of 1.99 meters in Edmonton, Alberta, 5 months after giving birth to her first son, Neil. She has a daughter, Katelin, and a son, Jacob. She is married to a physician, Dr. Douglas Coleman.
In 1983, she was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in recognition for being "Canada's premier woman high-jumper".[3]
Achievements
Year Tournament Venue Result Event 1970 Commonwealth Games Edinburgh, Scotland 1st High Jump 1971 Pan American Games Cali, Colombia 1st High Jump 1972 Olympic Games Munich, West Germany 8th High Jump 1978 Commonwealth Games Edmonton, Canada 2nd High Jump 1979 Pan American Games San Juan, Puerto Rico 3rd High Jump 1982 Commonwealth Games Brisbane, Australia 1st High Jump 1983 World Championships Helsinki, Finland 6th High Jump 1984 Olympic Games Los Angeles, California 5th High Jump References
- Statistics
- Canadian Olympic Committee
- IAAF profile for Debbie Brill
- ^ "IAAF standings 1972-1985". iaaf.org - The official athletics website. IAAF. http://www.iaaf.org/athletes/biographies/letter=b/country=can/athcode=63788/index.html. Retrieved 25 June 2011.
- ^ "WOMEN’S WORLD RANKINGS, 1956-2010". 14-wHJRank.pdf. Track and Field News. http://www.trackandfieldnews.com/index.php/special-articles/583. Retrieved 25 June 2011.
- ^ Order of Canada citation
Pan American Champions in Women's High Jump 1951: Jacinta Sandiford (ECU) • 1955: Mildred McDaniel (USA) • 1959: Ann Flynn (USA) • 1963 – 1967: Eleanor Montgomery (USA) • 1971: Debbie Brill (CAN) • 1975: Joni Huntley (USA) • 1979: Louise Ritter (USA) • 1983 – 1987: Coleen Sommer (USA) • 1991 – 1995: Ioamnet Quintero (CUB) • 1999: Solange Witteveen (ARG) • 2003: Juana Arrendel (DOM) • 2007: Romary Rifka (MEX) • 2011: Lesyani Mayor (CUB)
Commonwealth Champions in Women's High Jump 1934: Marjorie Clark (SAF) · 1938–50: Dorothy Tyler-Odam (ENG) · 1954: Thelma Hopkins (NIR) · 1958: Michele Brown (AUS) · 1962: Robyn Woodhouse (AUS) · 1966: Michele Brown (AUS) · 1970: Debbie Brill (CAN) · 1974: Barbara Lawton (ENG) · 1978: Katrina Gibbs (AUS) · 1982: Debbie Brill (CAN) · 1986: Christine Stanton (AUS) · 1990: Tania Murray (NZL) · 1994: Alison Inverarity (AUS) · 1998–2002: Hestrie Cloete (RSA) · 2006: Anika Smit (RSA) · 2010: Nicole Forrester (CAN)
IAAF World / Continental Cup Champions in Women's High Jump 1977: Rosemarie Ackermann (GDR) • 1979: Debbie Brill (CAN) • 1981: Ulrike Meyfarth (FRG) • 1985: Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) • 1989: Silvia Costa (CUB) • 1992: Ioamnet Quintero (CUB) • 1994: Britta Bilač (SLO) • 1998: Monica Iagăr (ROM) • 2002: Hestrie Cloete (RSA) • 2006: Yelena Slesarenko (RUS) • 2010: Blanka Vlašić (CRO)
Sporting positions Preceded by
Louise RitterUSA National High Jump Champion
1979Succeeded by
Coleen RienstraPreceded by
Pamela SpencerUSA National High Jump Champion
1982Succeeded by
Louise RitterMasters athletics Events Records World Records · American RecordsAthletes World Masters Athletics · List of Masters Athletes · USATF Masters Hall of FameCategories:- 1953 births
- Living people
- Canadian high jumpers
- Commonwealth Games gold medallists for Canada
- Commonwealth Games silver medallists for Canada
- Olympic track and field athletes of Canada
- Officers of the Order of Canada
- Sportspeople from British Columbia
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1970 British Commonwealth Games
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1978 Commonwealth Games
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1982 Commonwealth Games
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1972 Summer Olympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1984 Summer Olympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1971 Pan American Games
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1979 Pan American Games
- People from Mission, British Columbia
- Canadian sportswomen
- Canadian track and field athletics biography stubs
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