- Mark Lewis-Francis
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Mark Lewis-Francis
Lewis-Francis in Osaka, 2007.Personal information Nationality England
Great BritainBorn 4 September 1982
Darlaston, EnglandHeight 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) Weight 86 kg (190 lb) Sport Sport Running Event(s) Sprints Achievements and titles Personal best(s) 100 m: 10.04 s (Paris 2002)
200 m: 20.94 s (Tallahassee 2002)Medal recordMen’s Athletics Competitor for Great Britain Olympic Games Gold 2004 Athens 4x100 m relay World Championships Bronze 2005 Helsinki 4x100 m relay Bronze 2007 Osaka 4x100 m relay European Championships Gold 2006 Gothenburg 4x100 m relay Silver 2010 Barcelona 100 m Continental Cup Bronze 2010 Split 100 m Competitor for England Commonwealth Games Silver 2010 Delhi 100 m Gold 2010 Delhi 4x100 m relay Mark Anthony Lewis-Francis (born 4 September 1982) is a British track and field athlete, specifically a sprinter, who specialises in the 100 metres. A renowned junior, his greatest sporting achievement at senior level has been to anchor the Great Britain and Northern Ireland 4 x 100 metres relay team to a shock gold medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics. Individually, Lewis-Francis has won the silver medal in the 100 m at the 2010 European Athletics Championships, and numerous indoor medals.
Lewis-Francis is a member of the Birchfield Harriers athletics club and is also known as the "Darlaston Dart".
Contents
Early career
Lewis-Francis burst onto the scene at an early age but did not attend the 2000 Summer Olympics, instead competing at the World Junior Championships, in which he won gold. Lewis-Francis became Britain's top 100 m sprinter after Dwain Chambers was banned for drug use in 2003. He failed to make the final of the 100 mt at the 2004 Summer Olympics, but days later ran the final leg of the 4 x 100 m relay, holding off former Olympic champion Maurice Greene, allowing the Great Britain team to narrowly win in a time of 38.07 seconds. The gold medal team consisted of Lewis-Francis, Marlon Devonish, Darren Campbell and Jason Gardener.
As the last of the four in both race and alphabetical order, Lewis-Francis became the fiftieth man to win a gold medal for Great Britain in Athletics at the Olympics.
Despite this and other Olympic and World relay success, his junior success has not as yet translated to consistent performance at the highest level in individual championships. His surprise silver medal in the 100m at the 2010 European Athletics Championships was his first individual medal at senior level.
Transition to seniors
In 2001 Lewis-Francis won a World Athletics Championships 100 m quarter-final heat in 9.97 seconds, which would have been a junior world record, but a wind gauge malfunction meant it was unratifiable.
Unusually, Lewis-Francis' times have become slower as he has moved into his twenties. Although athletes tend to peak around their late 20s in the sprints, Lewis-Francis peak to date remains his performances while in his late teens. He has turned down numerous invitations to train with the top sprinters like Justin Gatlin in America, and prefers to stay living in England on the grounds that he would get 'home-sick.' However he did leave his home town of Birmingham in 2005 to move to Eton and train with a new coach.
Return to top level
After a year out with an Achilles injury, Lewis-Francis engaged in warm weather training in California with his new coach Linford Christie. Putting a history of injuries behind him, he set his sights on making the 100 m final at the Berlin World Championships.[1] However, he failed to make the team.
Following a late call up to the Great Britain squad, in July 2010 he won silver at the 2010 European Athletics Championships in a time of 10.18 seconds, his first major individual medal at senior level. As a result he was selected to represent Europe at the 2010 IAAF Continental Cup and he took the bronze medal while European champion Christophe Lemaitre won the race.[2] Lewis-Francis gained a second silver of the season at the 2010 Commonwealth Games: he recorded a season's best run of 10.15 seconds in the qualifiers and he ran 10.20 seconds to finish as runner-up behind Lerone Clarke in the final, having pulled himself back in to contention after his starting blocks slipped.[3]
Drugs tests
Lewis-Francis tested positive for cannabis after the European Indoor Championships in Madrid, Spain on 5 March 2005, and was stripped of the 60 metres silver medal he won at that event. According to the British Olympic Association (BOA) rules, this rendered him ineligible for selection to future Olympic Games. In 2006, UK Athletics, the governing body of Athletics in the UK, accepted that cannabis had not been taken to enhance performance, and the BOA cleared him to compete in future games.[4] In December 2007, after the Christine Ohuruogu affair, Lewis-Francis was one of three British athletes to come out and state that they had missed three drugs tests.[5]
See also
- List of sportspeople sanctioned for doping offences
References
- ^ Bolt success drives Lewis-Francis . BBC Sport (2009-05-24). Retrieved on 2009-05-24.
- ^ Ramsak, Bob (2010-09-04). EVENT Report - Men's 100 Metres. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-10-07.
- ^ Commonwealth Games 2010: Lewis-Francis wins 100m silver . BBC Sport (2010-10-07). Retrieved on 2010-10-07.
- ^ BBC SPORT | Athletics | Lewis-Francis clear for Olympics
- ^ Scott Rutherford (December 6, 2007). "Mark Lewis-Francis holds up his hand to missing two tests". The Times. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/more_sport/athletics/article3007165.ece. Retrieved 2008-01-12.
External links
- IAAF profile for Mark Lewis-Francis
- Interview from The Independent
Olympic Champions in Men's 4×100 m Relay - 1912
- 1920
- 1924
- 1928
- 1932
- 1936
- 1948
- 1952
- 1956
- 1960
- 1964
- 1968
- 1972
- 1976
- 1980
- 1984
- 1988
- 1992
- 1996
- 2000
- 2004
- 2008
Post-War British Olympic Champions in Men's Athletics - 1956: Chris Brasher (3000 m steeplechase)
- 1960: Don Thompson (50 km walk)
- 1964: Ken Matthews (20 km walk)
- 1964: Lynn Davies (long jump)
- 1968: David Hemery (400 m hurdles)
- 1980: Allan Wells (100 m)
- 1980: Steve Ovett (800 m)
- 1980 & 1984: Sebastian Coe (1500 m)
- 1980 & 1984: Daley Thompson (decathlon)
- 1992: Linford Christie (100 m)
- 2000: Jonathan Edwards (triple jump)
- 2004: Jason Gardener, Darren Campbell, Marlon Devonish & Mark Lewis-Francis (4 x 100 m relay)
European Champions in Men's 4 x 100 m relay 1934: Germany (Schein, Gillmeister, Hornberger, Borchmeyer) • 1938: Germany (Kersch, Hornberger, Neckermann, Scheuring) • 1946: Sweden (Danielsson, Nilsson, Laessker, Håkansson) • 1950: Soviet Union (Sukharev, Kalyayev, Sanadze, Karakulov) • 1954: Hungary (Zarándi, Varasdi, Csányi, Goldoványi) • 1958: West Germany (Mahlendorf, Hary, Fütterer, Germar) • 1962: West Germany (Ulonska, Gamper, Bender, Germar) • 1966: France (Berger, Delecour, Piquemal, Bambuck) • 1969: France (Sarteur, Bourbeillon, Fenouil, St.-Gilles) • 1971: Czechoslovakia (Kříž, Demeč, Kynos, Bohman) • 1974: France (Sainte-Rose, Arame, Cherrier, Chauvelot) • 1978: Poland (Nowosz, Licznerski, Dunecki, Woronin) • 1982: Soviet Union (Sokolov, Aksinin, Prokofyev, Sidorov) • 1986: Soviet Union (Yevgenyev, Yuschmanov, Muravyov, Bryzhin) • 1990: France (Morinière, Sangouma, Trouabal, Marie-Rose) • 1994: France (Lomba, Perrot, Trouabal, Sangouma) • 1998: Great Britain (Condon, Campbell, Walker, Golding) • 2002: Ukraine (Vasyukov, Rurak, Dovhal, Kaydash) • 2006: Great Britain (Chambers, Campbell, Devonish, Lewis-Francis) • 2010: France (Vicaut, Lemaitre, Pessonneaux, Mbandjock)
Categories:- 1982 births
- Living people
- People from Darlaston
- English athletes
- English sprinters
- Commonwealth Games competitors for England
- Olympic athletes of Great Britain
- Athletes (track and field) at the 2004 Summer Olympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 2006 Commonwealth Games
- Olympic gold medalists for Great Britain
- Doping cases in athletics
- English sportspeople in doping cases
- Black English sportspeople
- Commonwealth Games gold medallists for England
- Olympic medalists in athletics (track and field)
- Birchfield Harriers
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