Jason Gardener
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Olympic medal record | |||
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Men's Athletics | |||
Gold | 2004 Athens | 4 x 100m relay |
Jason Gardener (born September 18, 1975 in Bath, Somerset, England) is a sprint athlete.
He was educated at Beechen Cliff School, Bath, where he now has a tutor group named after him.
Jason started his career at the World Junior Championships in 1994 where he placed second in the individual 100 m. and bettered this to take his first gold medal as part of the 4 × 100 m. relay team.
He took another silver, this time in the 60 m., at the European Indoor Championships of 1998 but was not chosen for the relay team which took gold.
In 1999 he took bronze at the World indoors in the 60 m, breaking the British record. and later that year saw him run 9.98 seconds breaking the 10.00 second barrier for the first time in the 100 m. He was also part of the national record breaking 4 × 100 m. relay team along with Darren Campbell, Marlon Devonish, and Dwain Chambers that they set in Seville, Spain running 37.73 seconds.
2000 saw Jason go one better in the European indoor 60 m. taking gold as well as breaking the national 50 m. record with a time of 5.61 s. Unfortunately he became injured during the summer and although making it to Sydney for the Olympics he did not progress through the early rounds.
He retained his European indoor title in 2002 as well as a 4 x 100 m. Commonwealth Games gold medal.
2003 saw another World indoors bronze despite being hampered by a hamstring injury but the following year he bettered this to take the gold, his first world individual title ahead of the fancied Shawn Crawford of the USA.
Jason made the squad for the 2004 Summer Olympics where he competed in the 100 m. and won the gold medal in the 4x100 m relay with Darren Campbell, Marlon Devonish and Mark Lewis-Francis in a 38.07 seconds their seasons best.
[edit] Major achievements
- 1994
- 1995
- European Cup - Villeneuve d'Ascq, France.
- 4 × 100 m. relay gold medal
- European Cup - Villeneuve d'Ascq, France.
- 1997
- 1998
- European Indoor Championships - Valencia, Spain.
- 60 m. silver medal
- European Indoor Championships - Valencia, Spain.
- 1999
- World Indoor Championships - Maebashi, Japan.
- 60 m. bronze medal
- European Cup - Paris, France.
- 4 × 100 m. relay bronze medal
- ran 100 m. personal best of 9.98 seconds in Lausanne, Switzerland.
- World Indoor Championships - Maebashi, Japan.
- 2000
- 2002
- European Indoor Championships - Vienna, Austria.
- 60 m. gold medal
- Commonwealth Games - Manchester, England
- 4 × 100 m. gold medal
- European Indoor Championships - Vienna, Austria.
- 2003
- World Indoor Championships - Birmingham, England.
- 60 m. bronze medal
- World Indoor Championships - Birmingham, England.
- 2004
- World Indoor Championships - Budapest, Hungary.
- 60 m. gold medal
- Summer Olympics - Athens, Greece.
- 4 × 100 m gold medal
- World Indoor Championships - Budapest, Hungary.
- 2005
- World Championships - Helsinki, Finland.
- 4 × 100 m bronze medal
- World Championships - Helsinki, Finland.
Jason has also won four senior national titles indoors and two outdoors.
[edit] External link
- IAAF profile for Jason Gardener
Olympic champions in men's 4×100 m relay |
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1912 1920 1924 1928 1932 1936 1948 1952 1956 1960 1964 1968 1972 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 |
2004 Great Britain Jason Gardener, Darren Campbell, Marlon Devonish & Mark Lewis-Francis |
Post-war British Olympic champions in men's athletics |
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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) |
Categories: 1975 births | Living people | English sprinters | Olympic competitors for Great Britain | Olympic gold medalists for Great Britain | Athletes at the 2000 Summer Olympics | Athletes at the 2004 Summer Olympics | Athletes at the 2006 Commonwealth Games | Natives of Somerset | People from Bath