Dawn Harper-Nelson

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Dawn Harper-Nelson
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Harper at the 2011 World championships Athletics in Daegu.
Personal information
Full name Dawn Harper-Nelson
Nationality  United States
Born (1984-05-13) May 13, 1984 (age 39)
East St. Louis, Illinois
Height 5 ft 6 in (1.68 m)
Weight 134 lb (61 kg)
Sport
College team UCLA Bruins

Dawn Harper-Nelson (born May 13, 1984) from East St. Louis, Illinois is an American track and field athlete who specializes in the 100-meter hurdles. She was the gold medalist in the event at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games and the silver medalist in the 2012 London Olympic Games. Dawn Harper is the first American 100-meter hurdler to ever win gold at an Olympics and medal in the following Olympics. She is trained by Bob Kersee, husband of Jackie Joyner-Kersee, six time Olympic medalist also from her hometown of East St. Louis, Illinois.

High school and collegiate career

In high school, Dawn showed much promise in the sport by winning her first IHSA 2A State Championship and breaking the Illinois State record in the 100m hurdles her freshman year with a time of 14.03. In her freshman year, Harper also won the 300m hurdles with a time of 42.70. Her sophomore year was met with much adversity when she tore her PCL and Meniscus before the IHSA sectional meet. With a torn PCL and Meniscus, Harper still earned a silver medal in the 100m hurdles, but the discomfort moved her coach, Nino Fennoy, to scratch her from the 300m hurdle finals. She broke her own Illinois State Record in the 100m hurdles her Junior year with a time of 13.54. That record time still currently stands[1] Senior year Harper came back and defended her titles winning her third State final in the 100m hurdles with a time of 13.82 and the 300m hurdles. Harper graduated from East St. Louis Sr High School as a 6 time IHSA State Champion. During her time with the UCLA Bruins, Harper won the sprint hurdles at the US Junior Championships and at the Pan American Junior Athletics Championships. She received All-American honours twice at the 2004 NCAA Women's Outdoor Track and Field Championship, after coming eighth in the 100 m hurdles final and taking second place in the 4×100-meter relay.[2]

2008: First Olympics

The 2008 season showed it was going to be arduous for Harper when she suffered an early injury that required arthroscopic surgery in February, right before the outdoor season began. Four months later, she reached the final of the 100-meter hurdles in the U.S. Olympic Trials squeaking into third place by .007 seconds cementing her place on her first Olympic team. Though training for Beijing with the US Trials and the trials of injury behind her, Harper was met with another road block, no sponsor. Thankfully her teammate, injured hurdler Michelle Perry, gave her a pair of spikes she raced in through the Olympics.[3] Running at the 2008 Olympics, she upset the favorite by winning in the 100 m hurdles in a time of 12.54 seconds, a new personal best for Harper.[4] Harper closed her year with a third-place performance at the 2009 IAAF World Athletics Final.

2009

The defending Olympic gold medalist won her first national title in the women's 100m hurdles in 12.36. Though wind-aided, Harper posted the fourth fastest time ever by an American under any conditions.[5] She recorded a personal best of 12.48 seconds in the semi-finals of the 100 m hurdles at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics in Berlin. In the final Harper clipped hurdle two throwing her off bringing her back to manage a seventh-place finish.[2] She went on to 2009 IAAF World Athletics Final running 12.61 seconds for a silver medal. Dawn finished the season ranked 2nd in the world in the 100m hurdles.

2010–2011

The Comeback

In 2010 Harper suffered a knee injury at hurdle practice which ended her season early. The career threatening injury led to surgery and rehabilitation that occurred throughout the 2010 season until the beginning of the 2011 Outdoor season. With four months of training, Harper again made the US team placing 3rd the 100 meter hurdles at the USA Outdoor Championships. Getting back into championship form, she finished third in 2011 IAAF World Championships in Daegu, South Korea earning the bronze medal and a new personal best of (12.47)[6]

2012 London Olympics

Dawn started her 2012 season healthy for the first time since 2009. As she raced to prepare for the 2012 Olympics in London, Harper traveled to the West Indies to start her season with a victory at a rainy Guadalupe Meet. She then crossed the Atlantic to win both the Rome Diamond League 100m hurdle showdown and the Colorful Daegu Pre Championship Meet in South Korea. Harper carried that great form on to Eugene, Oregon to begin her quest for her second Olympic gold medal at the Olympic Trials. The reigning Olympic Champion showed up as the favorite and did not disappoint. She kept her quest alive winning her first United States Olympic Trials (track and field) in Oregon at Hayward Field in very soggy conditions.[7]

In London Dawn showed great fitness advancing from the quarterfinals in 12.75, then a running a season's best and personal record 12.46 in the semifinals. In the Olympic final she made history running down the entire field lowering her personal best time and tying the Olympic record of 12.37; ironically it was .02 seconds short of the gold.[8]

After the London Games, Harper continued the Diamond League tour finishing the second half of her season undefeated. First she won the Stockholm Galan Diamond League Meet. Next she traveled to Lausanne, Switzerland to post the second fastest time of her career, 12.43, at the Athletissima Diamond League Meet.[9] Dawn concluded the 2012 season winning the Diamond League Title in Weltklasse Zurich Diamond League Meet in a time of 12.59. Her Diamond League title granted her an automatic bye to the 2013 IAAF World Championship in Moscow Russia.[10] Dawn Harper was awarded All-Athletics.com Female Hurdler of the Year in North & Central America[11]

2013

March 23, Dawn Harper became Dawn Harper-Nelson marrying her high school friend and middle school rival. Dawn earned her first victory under the new name Harper-Nelson in the Jamaica Invitational with a world leading 12.63.[12] Two weeks later, she travelled to Doha Qatar to run a blistering 12.60 improving her world leading time by 0.03 seconds. She ended her May competition in Manchester, England by winning the Great City Games Street Race then traveling to Rome, Italy, Harper-Nelson to capture her 4th total and 3rd consecutive Golden Gala Diamond League victory. Harper-Nelson's 2012 Diamond League Championship earned her an automatic spot on the USA World Championship team heading to Moscow, Russia. Because of that Diamond League championship in 2012, she only needed to run one round of the USATF National Championship in Des Moines, Iowa to show fitness. She won her first round of the women's 100m hurdles in 12.60.

Harper-Nelson left Iowa for the Sainsbury's Grand Prix Diamond League in Birmingham, England which she won in a time of 12.64. Dawn celebrated Independence Day running a winning time of 12.53 in the Athletissima Diamond League in Lausanne, Switzerland.[13] At the IAAF World Championships Harper-Nelson finished in a disappointing 4th place time of 12.59. This marked the first major International Championship where she had not received a medal since the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. Nelson regrouped and set out to finish her Diamond League tour first stopping in Croatia to beat a similar field to the Moscow World Championships featuring Sally Pearson.[14] She put a stamp on her season and eased many minds when she went on to run a fast 12.48 at the Diamond League Final in Brussels, Belgium[15] winning her second Diamond League Title beating exactly the same field,[16] excluding the champion, from the Moscow World Champs again.

Personal life

Harper is the daughter of Henry and Linda Harper and has two sisters, Keya and Shivani, and two brothers, Bryton and Shiven. She attended UCLA and graduated with a Bachelor of Science in psychology in 2006.[17][18] After winning gold in the Beijing Olympics, Governor Rod Blagojevich of Illinois declared October 6 as Dawn Harper Day honoring her for her victory and humble beginnings being from East St. Louis, Illinois.[19]

In June 2012 Dawn Harper was named a spokeswoman for the American Diabetes Association and The FootMate® System by Gordon Brush.[20] Harper's passion for Diabetes prevention stems from a long line of family members that have been diagnosed with the disease and an uncle whom she had just lost to the disease in 2011. Following her silver medal in the London Olympics, Dawn was named the new Ambassador for United Way of Greater St. Louis Education Express.[21] Through Education Express, she promotes the importance of education and mentoring in the St. Louis region. Dawn loves speaking to children about their dreams and the importance of education.

On March 23, 2013, Harper married hometown friend, Alonzo Nelson. The couple had known each other since meeting on the track in eighth grade. Alonzo was the one boy hurdler Dawn couldn't beat. Before the wedding, Harper appeared on TLC's Say Yes to the Dress (season 10 episode 9: Race to the Alter) where she went to Kleinfelds in Brooklyn, NY to find her dress.[22][23] She is now using the name Dawn Harper-Nelson in competition.

References

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  2. 2.0 2.1 Dawn Harper Biography. USATF. Retrieved on 2010-06-07.
  3. Profile of Dawn Harper
  4. Harper wins Olympic hurdles after Jones slips. Reuters (2008-08-19). Retrieved on 2010-06-07.
  5. Visa Champions
  6. http://www.usatf.org/Athlete-Bios/Dawn-Harper.aspx
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  10. Track & Field
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  17. America's Latest Superstar: Dawn Harper. Coast to Coast Media. Retrieved on 2010-06-07.
  18. Dawn Harper, USA Track and Field.
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  23. http://www.teamusa.org/News/2013/February/14/From-London-To-In-Love

External links