Monday 8 March 2010

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International Women’s Day: Honoring Irena Szewinska

Posted: 07 Mar 2010 09:01 AM PST

March 8 is International Women’s Day.

It is a global day celebrating the economic, political and social achievements of women past, present and future. In some places like China, Russia, Vietnam and Bulgaria, International Women’s Day is a national holiday!

To honour this day, I will choose to write about Jackie Joyner-Kersee (USA) and Irena Szewinska (Poland).

I clearly remember Irena Szewinska of Poland winning the 400m, and Alberto Danger Juantorena winning the 400/800 double, at the 1976 Summer Olympics in my hometown of Montreal, Quebec, Canada. 

Little did I know at the time this was Irena Szewinska's 4th Olympiad! She had already competed in the 1964, 1968, 1972 Olympics and she would also compete in the 1980 Moscow boycotted Olympics.  Only Merlene Ottey has competed or qualified in 5 Olympics, but for 2 different countries.

Irena Szewinska I would call Jackie the World's Greatest Female Athlete, but Irena is the World's Greatest Female Sprinter.

Jackie Joyner-Kersee competed in 4 Olympics with this medal resume:

  • Gold: long jump, 1988; heptathlon, 1988, 1992;
  • Silver: heptathlon, 1984;
  • Bronze: long jump, 1992, 1996

But Irena Szewinska was the first woman to hold world records at 100m, 200m and 400m between 1968-1976:

  • 100m – 11.1 (1965 & 1968)
  • 200m – 22.58 (1968) & 22.21 (1974 )
  • 400m – 49.75 & 49.29 (both in 1976)

In reality, you can compare her to Usain Bolt (4 WR's) or Tommie Smith (11 concurrent WRs).

So here is Irena Szewinska's Olympic impressive medal resume:

  • 1964 Tokyo Olympics – Gold 4 x 100m, 43.6 WR
  • 1964 Tokyo Olympics – Silver 200m
  • 1964 Tokyo Olympics – Silver Long jump
  • 1968 Mexico City Olympics – Gold 200m
  • 1968 Mexico City Olympics – Bronze 100 m
  • 1972 Munich Olympics – Bronze 200m
  • 1976 Montreal Olympics – Gold 400m, 49.29 WR

If you thought Szewinska was going to retire after her 400 meter Gold medal in her 4th Olympics, think again. In the 1977 World Cup, she defeated rising star Marita Koch from East Germany. Koch would rarely lose a race in her "prime", so it's great to see Szewinska dig deep in the last 100 for the win.   Koch would later set the WR standard of 47.60 in 1985… a record that still remains today.

Here is the video on YouTube:

As a bonus, she wrote a coaching guide called Training Program For Women Sprinters: The Annual Plan (PDF).  A must read.

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