Sally Gunnell

{{short description|British track-and-field athlete}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2021}}

{{Use British English|date=March 2012}}

{{Infobox sportsperson

| headercolor =

| name = Sally Gunnell, OBE, DL

| image = Sally Gunnell in 1995_(cropped).jpg

| image_size =

| caption = Gunnell in 1995

| birth_name =

| fullname = Sally Jane Janet Gunnell

| nickname =

| native_name =

| native_name_lang =

| nationality = English

| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1966|07|29|df=yes}}{{cite web|title=Sally Gunnell|url=https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/gu/sally-gunnell-1.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200417174331/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/gu/sally-gunnell-1.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=17 April 2020|work=sports-reference.com|publisher=Sports Reference LLC|access-date=9 February 2014}}

| birth_place = Chigwell, Essex, England

| residence = Steyning, West Sussex, England

| death_date =

| death_place =

| height = {{height|m=1.66}}{{cite web|title=Sally Gunnell|url=http://www.teamgb.com/athletes/sally-gunnell|work=teamgb.com|publisher=British Olympic Association|access-date=9 February 2014}}

| weight = {{convert|57.5|kg|stlb|abbr=on}}

| website =

| country =

| sport = Athletics

| event = 400 m hurdles

| collegeteam =

| universityteam =

| club = Essex Ladies

| team =

| turnedpro =

| partner =

| former_partner =

| coach =

| retired =

| coaching =

| worlds =

| regionals =

| nationals =

| olympics =

| paralympics =

| highestranking =

| pb =

| medaltemplates =

{{MedalSport | Women's Athletics}}

{{MedalCountry|{{GBR2}}}}

{{MedalCompetition|Olympic Games}}

{{MedalGold|1992 Barcelona|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalBronze|1992 Barcelona|4 × 400 m relay}}

{{MedalCompetition|World Championships}}

{{MedalGold|1993 Stuttgart|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalSilver|1991 Tokyo|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalBronze |1993 Stuttgart|4 × 400 m relay}}

{{MedalCompetition|Goodwill Games}}

{{MedalGold|1994 Saint Petersburg|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalCompetition|IAAF World Cup}}

{{MedalGold|1994 London|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalGold|1994 London|4 × 400 m relay}}

{{MedalBronze|1989 Barcelona|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalCompetition|European Championships}}

{{MedalGold|1994 Helsinki|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalBronze|1990 Split|4 × 400 m relay}}

{{MedalCompetition|European Cup}}

{{MedalGold|1993 Rome|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalGold|1994 Birmingham|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalGold|1996 Madrid|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalGold|1997 Munich|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalSilver|1989 Gateshead|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalSilver|1991 Frankfurt|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalCompetition|European Indoor Championships}}

{{MedalGold|1989 The Hague|400 m}}

{{MedalCountry|{{ENG}}}}

{{MedalCompetition|Commonwealth Games}}

{{MedalGold|1986 Edinburgh|100 m hurdles}}

{{MedalGold|1990 Auckland|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalGold|1990 Auckland|4 × 400 m relay}}

{{MedalGold|1994 Victoria|400 m hurdles}}

{{MedalGold|1994 Victoria|4 × 400 m relay}}

{{MedalSilver|1990 Auckland|100 m hurdles}}

}}

Sally Jane Janet Gunnell, OBE, DL (born 29 July 1966) is a British former track-and-field athlete, who won the 1992 Olympic gold medal in the 400 metres hurdles. During a 24-month period between 1992 and 1994, Gunnell won every international event open to her, claiming Olympic Games, World Championship, European Championship, Commonwealth Games, Goodwill Games, IAAF World Cup and European Cup golds in the event, and breaking the British, European and World records in it. She is the only female British athlete to have won all four 'majors'; Olympic, World, European and Commonwealth titles,Sophie Hahn and Hannah Cockroft have won Paralympic, World Para, European Para and Commonwealth Games gold. and was the first female 400 metres hurdler in history to win the Olympic and World titles and break the world record. Her former world record time of 52.74 secs in 1993 is still the current British record. She was named World and European Female Athlete of the Year in 1993, and was made an MBE in 1993 and an OBE in 1998.

Early life

Gunnell was born in Chigwell, Essex, England to Les and Rosemary Gunnell, and grew up on the family's three-hundred-acreRunning Tall, Sally Gunnell and Christopher Priest, Bloomsbury, 1994, pp. 25–6 farm and attended the local primary and West Hatch High schools in Chigwell.{{citation needed|date=April 2020}}

Athletics career

Gunnell started out in athletics with the Essex Ladies club{{cite web |url=http://website.lineone.net/~wgel/history.html |title=Woodford Green Athletic Club with Essex Ladies |website=website.lineone.net |access-date=17 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20020203052918/http://website.lineone.net/~wgel/history.html |archive-date=3 February 2002 |url-status=dead}} as an accomplished long jumper and heptathlete, before specialising in hurdling. In 1984, she narrowly missed Olympic selection at both heptathlon, with a score of 5680 points and in the 100 metres hurdles, where she set a UK junior record of 13.30 secs.

In 1986, having won the AAAs and UK titles, Gunnell won the Commonwealth Games gold medal in the 100 metres hurdles in Edinburgh, ahead of Wendy Jeal and 1984 Olympic heptathlon champion Glynis Nunn. She would remain the UK number one in the event over the next four seasons and reach the semi-finals at the 1987 World Championships and 1988 Olympics in the event.

Gunnell first attempted the 400 m hurdles event in 1987, with a 59.9 clocking. In 1988, in her first full season at the event, she would reach the Olympic final in Seoul. At the Olympic trials in Birmingham, she broke the UK record with 55.40. In Seoul she would improve this twice, first to 54.48 in the semis then to 54.03, to finish fifth in the final. This would remain her best time in the event for three years.

In 1989, Gunnell won the European Indoor title at 400 metres. Outdoors, she finished second in the 400 m hurdles at the European Cup behind East Germany's Petra Krug, but ahead of Olympic silver medallist Tatyana Ledovskaya. In September at the World Cup, she was third behind Sandra Farmer-Patrick of the US and Ledovsakya, but this time ahead of Krug. In January 1990, she defeated 1988 Olympic champion Debbie Flintoff-King to win the Commonwealth title in Auckland. The 1990 summer season however was disappointing, when she only finished sixth at the European Championships.

Gunnell entered into the best phase of her career in 1991, improving her own three-year-old UK record three times. In Monaco she ran 53.78, in Zurich she ran 53.62, then at the World Championships in Tokyo, she won the silver medal behind Ledovskaya with 53.16, the then third fastest time of all-time. Ledovskaya won with 53.11.

Gunnell won the 400 m hurdles at the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona, running 53.23 to defeat Sandra Farmer-Patrick.{{Cite web|url=http://www.britisholympians.com/athlete.aspx?at=1462|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070907012103/http://www.britisholympians.com/athlete.aspx?at=1462|archive-date = 7 September 2007|title = Home}} She also anchored the British 4 × 400 m quartet to a bronze medal. In 1993, she reached her peak, when she set the world record in the 400 hurdles to win gold in the World Championships in Stuttgart, winning in 52.74, narrowly ahead of Farmer-Patrick who ran 52.79, also inside the old record.

This record was broken by Kim Batten in 1995, but is still the British record. Gunnell was the first female 400 metres hurdler to have won the Olympic and World titles and broken the world record, a feat since achieved by both Dalilah Muhammad and Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone.

In 1994, Gunnell added the European title to her collection, winning comfortably in 53.33. She also won the Goodwill Games ahead of Kim Batten, successfully defended her Commonwealth title and won the World Cup title in London. 1994 was her third (and final) year as the world's number one. She missed most of 1995 due to injury, an injury from which she would never fully recover. Her defence of her Olympic title in Atlanta in 1996 was cut short when she pulled up injured in the semi-finals. This seemed a particularly cruel blow, as this race occurred on her 30th birthday.{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/essex/content/articles/2006/12/20/essex_at_20_sally_gunnell_feature.shtml |title=Essex – Features – Essex at 20: Sally Gunnell |publisher=BBC |access-date=2016-11-24}} Also in 1996, she worked as a Red Cross ambassador in Angola. In September 1997, she retired after a recurrence of an Achilles tendon injury forced her to pull out of the World Championships semi-final.

Gunnell remains the only woman to have won the European, World, Commonwealth and Olympic 400-metre hurdles titles.{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport3/commonwealthgames2002/hi/bbc_coverage/newsid_2056000/2056152.stm |title=BBC SPORT | Commonwealth Games 2002 | BBC Coverage | Sally Gunnell |work=BBC News |date=2002-07-18 |access-date=2016-11-24}}

Gunnell is now involved as one of the ambassadors for McCain's Track & Field partnership with UK Athletics.{{cite web|url=http://mccaintrackandfield.co.uk/meet-our-athletes/elite/sally-gunnell/|title=McCain Track & Field – Meet The Athletes: Sally Gunnell|work=mccaintrackandfield.co.uk|access-date=7 August 2012|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110914204909/http://www.mccaintrackandfield.co.uk/meet-our-athletes/elite/sally-gunnell/|archive-date=14 September 2011}}

Television

Gunnell worked as a television presenter, predominantly for the BBC, until 2006.{{citation needed|date=April 2020}} She also co-hosted the game show Body Heat (1994–96) on ITV with Mike Smith and Jeremy Guscott.{{cite web|url=http://www.ukgameshows.com/ukgs/Body_Heat |work= UK Game Shows |title=Body Heat |access-date= 6 November 2019}}

Gunnell was one of the four celebrity guests in the ITV's You Bet! – Series 7 (1993–94), co-winning with Michaela Strachan, donating her winnings to a charity working to find a cure for breast cancer.{{citation needed|date=October 2019}} In 1997, she was the recipient of the "big red book" on the This is Your Life programme.{{citation needed|date=October 2019}}

In summer 2006, she was a celebrity showjumper in the BBC's Sport Relief event Only Fools on Horses.{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/newsid_5060000/newsid_5062100/5062110.stm |title=Celebs saddle up for Sport Relief |publisher=CBBC|work=Newsround |date=8 June 2006 |access-date=24 November 2016}} She also won a Weakest Link Sporting Heroes Special, first broadcast on 25 July 2009 on BBC One.{{citation needed|date=October 2019}}

She took part in a celebrity version of TV show Total Wipeout which aired on 2 January 2010.{{Citation|title=Episode #2.11|date=2 January 2010|url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1592724/|access-date=2020-01-27}}

In 2012, Gunnell took part on ITV's The Cube and won £20,000 for her charity.{{citation needed|date=October 2019}}

Recognition

In the 1993 New Year Honours, Gunnell was made an MBE (Member of the Order of the British Empire) and in the 1998 Birthday Honours, she was made an OBE (Officer of the Order of the British Empire).{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/special_report/1998/06/98/queens_birthday_honours/111911.stm|title=Queens Birthday Honours | Sports stars share honours|work=BBC News|date=1998-06-13|access-date=2016-11-24}} In 2011, Gunnell was appointed Deputy Lieutenant of West Sussex.{{cite news|last=Walker|first=Tim|title=Sally Gunnell to be Queen's loyal lieutenant|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/queen-elizabeth-II/8816657/Sally-Gunnell-to-be-Queens-loyal-lieutenant.html|access-date=11 October 2011|newspaper=The Daily Telegraph|date=10 October 2011}}

In 2012, Gunnell was one of five Olympians chosen as part of a series body-casting artworks by Louise Giblin exhibited in London and copies were being sold in aid of the charity Headfirst.{{cite web|url=http://www.louisegiblin.co.uk/|title=Louise Giblin body cast sculptor|website=Louisegiblin.co.uk|access-date=2016-11-24}}

Personal life

Gunnell is married to fellow athlete Jonathan Bigg, and has three sons; Finley, Luca and Marley. She lives near Brighton in East Sussex.David Morgan {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20001211134300/http://www.sportinglife.com/olympics/best_of_british/story_get.dor?STORY_NAME=others%2F00%2F08%2F22%2FOLYMPICS_Gunnell.html|title=

Super Sally's Spanish Success|date=11 December 2000}} Sporting Life (PA Sport), 11 December 2000

National titles

  • 7-times AAAs 100 m hurdles champion (1986–1989, 1991–1993)
  • 2-time AAAs 400 m hurdles champion (1988, 1996)
  • 2-time UK Champion – 100 m hurdles (1986) 400 m hurdles (1997)
  • 2-time AAAs Indoor Champion – 200 m (1987) 400 m (1988)

International competitions

{{AchievementTable|Event=yes}}
colspan="6"| Representing {{GBR2}} / {{ENG}}
1983

|European Junior Championships

|Schwechat, Austria

|13th

|Heptathlon

|5395

rowspan=2|1986

|Commonwealth Games

|Edinburgh, Scotland

| style="background:gold;"| 1st

|100 m hurdles

|13.29

European Championships

|Stuttgart, West Germany

|17th (h)

|100 m hurdles

|13.22 (wind: 0.0 m/s)

1987

|World Championships

|Rome, Italy

|10th (sf)

|100 m hurdles

|13.06

rowspan=4|1988

|European Indoor Championships

|Budapest, Hungary

|4th

|400 m

|51.77

rowspan=3|Olympic Games

|rowspan=3|Seoul, South Korea

|11th (sf)

|100 m hurdles

|13.13

5th

|400 m hurdles

|54.03

6th

|4 × 400 m

|3:26.89

rowspan=3|1989

|European Indoor Championships

|The Hague, Netherlands

| style="background:gold;"| 1st

|400 m

|52.04

World Indoor Championships

|Budapest, Hungary

|6th

|400 m

|52.60

World Cup

|Barcelona, Spain

| style="background:#c96;"| 3rd

|400 m hurdles

|55.25

rowspan=6|1990

|rowspan=3|Commonwealth Games

|rowspan=3|Auckland, New Zealand

| style="background:silver;"| 2nd

|100 m hurdles

|13.12

style="background:gold;"| 1st

|400 m hurdles

|55.38

style="background:gold;"| 1st

|4 × 400 m

|3:28.08

European Indoor Championships

|Glasgow, Scotland

|4th

|400 m

|53.38

rowspan=2|European Championships

|rowspan=2|Split, Yugoslavia

|6th

|400 m hurdles

|55.45

style="background:#c96;"| 3rd

|4 × 400 m

|3:24.78

rowspan=2|1991

|rowspan=2|World Championships

|rowspan=2|Tokyo, Japan

| style="background:silver;"| 2nd

|400 m hurdles

|53.16

4th

|4 × 400 m

|3:22.01

rowspan=2|1992

|rowspan=2|Olympic Games

|rowspan=2|Barcelona, Spain

| style="background:gold;"| 1st

|400 m hurdles

|53.23

style="background:#c96;"| 3rd

|4 × 400 m

|3:24.23

rowspan=2|1993

|rowspan=2|World Championships

|rowspan=2|Stuttgart, Germany

| style="background:gold;"| 1st

|400 m hurdles

|52.74

style="background:#c96;"| 3rd

|4 × 400 m

|3:23.41

rowspan=6|1994

|rowspan=2|European Championships

|rowspan=2|Helsinki, Finland

| style="background:gold;"| 1st

|400 m hurdles

|53.33

4th

|4 × 400 m

|3:24.14

rowspan=2|Commonwealth Games

|rowspan=2|Victoria, Canada

| style="background:gold;"| 1st

|400 m hurdles

|54.51

style="background:gold;"| 1st

|4 × 400 m

|3:27.06

rowspan=2|World Cup

|rowspan=2|London, England

| style="background:gold;"| 1st

|400 m hurdles

|54.80

style="background:gold;"| 1st

|4 × 400 m

|3:27.36

|1996

|Olympic Games

|Atlanta, United States

|DNF (sf)

|400 m hurdles

|55.29 (heat)

rowspan=3|1997

|rowspan=2|World Indoor Championships

|rowspan=2|Paris, France

|13th (h)

|400 m

|53.05

6th

|4 × 400 m

|3:32.25

World Championships

|Athens, Greece

|DNS (sf)

|400 m hurdles

|54.53 (heat)

colspan=6| (#) Indicates overall position in qualifying heats (h) or semifinals (sf)

Note: Represented Great Britain in all events excluding the Commonwealth Games, where she represented England and the 1989 World Cup, where she represented Europe.

References

{{Reflist}}