- Christine Arron
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Medal record
Christine Arron at the 2007 World Championships in Athletics.Competitor for France Women's athletics Olympic Games Bronze 2004 Athens 4x100 m relay World Championships Gold 2003 Paris 4x100 m relay Silver 1999 Athens 4x100 m relay Bronze 1997 Athens 4x100 m relay Bronze 2005 Helsinki 100 m Bronze 2005 Helsinki 200 m European Championships Gold 1998 Budapest 100 metres Gold 1998 Budapest 4x100 m relay Silver 2010 Barcelona 4x100 m relay Mediterranean Games Gold 1997 Bari 200 m Gold 1997 Bari 4x100 m relay CARIFTA Games (Under 20s) Gold 1992 Nassau 100 m CARIFTA Games (Under 17s) Bronze 1989 Bridgetown 100 m |} Christine Arron (born September 13, 1973 in Les Abymes, Guadeloupe) is a track and field sprint athlete, competing internationally for France. She is the fourth fastest woman ever over 100 metres, and holds the European record of 10.73 seconds.
Contents
Career
She arrived in Metropolitan France in 1990 and first trained with Fernand Urtebise, who also coached 1997 world 400 m hurdles champion Stephane Diagana. She had a hip injury which kept her out of the 2001 World Championships. She was named 1998 European Women's Athlete of the Year, after winning the 100m at the European Athletics Championships, breaking the European record in the process.
In 2001, after a heavy training period in the U.S. with John Smith and the HSI[disambiguation needed ] group, she quit training for a year, saying she was physically exhausted from the experience. "It was hell. Every morning I wondered how I was going to put up with the burden of training." In June 2002 she gave birth to her first child.
Arron was also the last runner of the French 4x100 relay team which upset the heavy favourites USA to win the gold medal in the 2003 World Championships in Athletics held in Paris. She recovered from 3 m behind the new 100 m World Champion, Torri Edwards, to give to the Stade de France crowd an unpredicted joy.
She won the bronze medal in the 4x100m relay at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece.
In August 2005 she won a bronze medal in the 100 meters and in the 200 meters at the 2005 World Championships in Athletics.
Arron is the holder of the fourth-fastest legal 100 m performance ever (10.73). Considering the controversy surrounding the performances of world record-holder, Florence Griffith-Joyner, many considered Arron's performance to be the 'true' world record. The next run considered a world record is Carmelita Jeter's 10.64 at Shanghai in 2009.[1]
At the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing she competed at the 100 metres sprint. In her first round heat she placed first in front of Lauryn Williams and Tahesia Harrigan in a time of 11.37 to advance to the second round. There she failed to qualify for the semi finals as her time of 11.36 was only the fourth time of her heat behind Debbie Ferguson, Oludamola Osayomi and Vida Anim, causing elimination.[citation needed]
Views on doping
Arron has voiced her annoyance with Marion Jones, her fiercest rival during her career: "She has lied for years [...] She treated everyone as idiots. I'm not shocked she is going to jail. Many people criticised me because I was always the one who lost in the Jones-Arron battle, even if I had very good results. We started running together in 1997. She has stolen my best years. Everything could have been different for me."[2]
References
External links
- IAAF profile for Christine Arron
- Christine Arron Pictures
Preceded by
Astrid KumbernussWomen's European Athlete of the Year
1998Succeeded by
Gabriela SzaboEuropean Champions in Women's 100 m 1938: Stanisława Walasiewicz (POL) • 1946: Yevgeniya Sechenova (URS) • 1950: Fanny Blankers-Koen (NED) • 1954: Irina Turova (URS) • 1958: Heather Armitage (GBR) • 1962: Dorothy Hyman (GBR) • 1966: Ewa Kłobukowska (POL) • 1969: Petra Vogt (GDR) • 1971: Renate Stecher (GDR) • 1974: Irena Szewińska (POL) • 1978: Marlies Göhr (GDR) • 1982: Marlies Göhr (GDR) • 1986: Marlies Göhr (GDR) • 1990: Katrin Krabbe (GDR) • 1994: Irina Privalova (RUS) • 1998: Christine Arron (FRA) • 2002: Ekaterini Thanou (GRE) • 2006: Kim Gevaert (BEL) • 2010: Verena Sailer (GER)
European Champions in Women's 4 x 100 m relay 1938: Germany (Kohl, Krauß, Albus, Kühnel) • 1946: Netherlands (van der Kade-Koudijs, Witziers-Timmer, Adema, Blankers-Koen) • 1950: Great Britain (Hay, Desforges, Hall, Foulds) • 1954: Soviet Union (Krepkina, Uliskina, Itkina, Turova) • 1958: Soviet Union (Krepkina, Kepp, Polyakova, Maslovskaya) • 1962: Poland (Ciepły, Sobotta, Szyroka, Piątkowska) • 1966: Poland (Bednarek, Straszynska, Kirszenstein, Kłobukowska) • 1969: East Germany (Höfer, Meissner, Podeswa, Vogt) • 1971: West Germany (Schittenhelm, Helten, Irrgang, Mickler) • 1974: East Germany (Maletzki, Stecher, Heinich, Eckert) • 1978: Soviet Union (Anisimova, Maslakova, Kondratyeva, Storoshkova) • 1982: East Germany (Walther, Eckert, Rieger, Göhr) • 1986: East Germany (Gladisch, Rieger, Brestrich-Auerswald, Göhr) • 1990: East Germany (Möller, Krabbe, Behrendt, Günther) • 1994: Germany (Paschke, Knoll, Zipp, Lichtenhagen) • 1998: France (Benth, Bangué, Félix, Arron) • 2002: France (Combe, Hurtis, Félix, Sidibé) • 2006: Russia (Gushchina, Rusakova, Khabarova, Grigoryeva) • 2010: Ukraine (Povh, Pohrebnyak, Ryemyen, Bryzhina)
Mediterranean Champions in Women's 200 m 1979: Marisa Masullo (ITA) • 1983: Rose-Aimée Bacoul (FRA) • 1987 – 1991: Marisa Masullo (ITA) • 1993: Maguy Nestoret (FRA) • 1997: Christine Arron (FRA) • 2001: Nora Güner (TUR) • 2005: Alenka Bikar (SLO) • 2009: Eleni Artymata (CYP)
Categories:- 1973 births
- Living people
- French sprinters
- Athletes (track and field) at the 2000 Summer Olympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 2004 Summer Olympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 2008 Summer Olympics
- Olympic athletes of France
- Guadeloupean athletes
- French people of Guadeloupean descent
- Olympic bronze medalists for France
- Olympic medalists in athletics (track and field)
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