Maicel Malone-Wallace
Maicel Malone-WallacePersonal information |
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Birth name |
Maicel D. Malone |
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Born |
June 6, 1969 (1969-06-06) (age 46) Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S. |
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Spouse(s) |
Aaron Wallace (m. 1994) |
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Maicel D. Malone-Wallace (born June 6, 1969 in Indianapolis, Indiana) is an American former track and field athlete who specialised in the 400 meters. She was the 1996 Olympic Games gold medalist in the women's 4 x 400 meters relay for the United States.[1]
Achievements
Year |
Competition |
Venue |
Position |
Event |
Notes |
Representing the United States |
1986 |
World Junior Championships |
Athens, Greece |
3rd |
100m |
11.49 (wind: +0.9m/s) |
8th (sf) |
200m |
23.72 (wind: +0.5m/s) |
1st |
4×100m relay |
43.78 |
1988 |
World Junior Championshps |
Sudbury, Canada |
2nd |
400 m |
52.23 |
1990 |
Goodwill Games |
Seattle, United States |
2nd |
4x400 m |
3:24.53 |
1991 |
Universiade |
Sheffield, United Kingdom |
1st |
400 m |
50.65 |
1st |
4x400 m |
3:27.93 |
1993 |
World Championships |
Stuttgart, Germany |
1st |
4x400 m |
3:16.71 |
1994 |
Goodwill Games |
Saint Petersburg, Russia |
2nd |
400 m |
50.60 |
1st |
4x400 m |
3;22.27 |
1995 |
World Championships |
Gothenburg, Sweden |
7th |
400 m |
50.99 (50.77) |
1996 |
Olympic Games |
Atlanta, United States |
semifinal |
400 m |
51.16 |
1st |
4x400 m |
3:20.91 |
1997 |
World Championships |
Athens, Greece |
semifinal |
400 m |
51.40 (50.77) |
2nd |
4x400 m |
3:21.03 |
1999 |
World Championships |
Seville, Spain |
semifinal |
400 m |
50.93 (50.82) |
2nd |
4x400 m |
3:22.09 |
Note: Results in parenthesis, indicate superior time achieved in the previous round.
References
- ↑ "Maicel Malone". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved May 24, 2015.
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- 1972: East Germany (Käsling, Kühne, Seidler, Zehrt)
- 1976: East Germany (Maletzki, Rohde, Streidt, Brehmer)
- 1980: Soviet Union (Prorochenko, Goyshchik, Zyuskova, Nazarova)
- 1984: United States (Leatherwood, S. Howard, Brisco-Hooks, Cheeseborough, Dixon, D. Howard)
- 1988: Soviet Union (Ledovskaya, Nazarova, Pinigina, Bryzhina, Dzhigalova)
- 1992: Unified Team (Ruzina, Dzhigalova, Nazarova, Bryzhina, Nurutdinova, Shmonina)
- 1996: United States (Stevens, Malone-Wallace, Graham, Miles, Wilson)
- 2000: United States (Miles Clark, Hennagan, Colander, Anderson)
- 2004: United States (Trotter, Henderson, Richards, Hennagan, Robinson)
- 2008: United States (Wineberg, Felix, Henderson, Richards, Hastings)
- 2012: United States (Trotter, Felix, McCorory, Richards-Ross, Baker, Dixon)
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| Qualification | | |
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| Men's track & road athletes | |
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| Men's field athletes | |
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| Women's track & road athletes | |
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| Women's field athletes | |
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| Coaches | — |
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| 1958–1979 Amateur Athletic Union | |
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| 1980–1992 The Athletics Congress | |
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| 1993–present USA Track & Field | |
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| Notes |
- OT: Since 1992, championships incorporated the Olympic Trials in Olympic years, otherwise held as a discrete event.
- Distance:The event was over 440 yards until 1932, 1955, 1957–8, 1961–3, 1965–6, 1969–70 and 1973–4
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