Lynn Jennings

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Medal record
Women’s Athletics
Competitor for Flag of the United States United States
Olympic Games
Bronze 1992 Barcelona 10.000 metres
World Cross Country Championships
Gold 1990 Aix-les-Bains Women's race
Gold 1991 Antwerp Women's race
Gold 1992 Boston Women's race

Lynn Jennings (born July 1, 1960 in Princeton, NJ) is a retired American athlete who competed mainly in the long distances. She is one of the best female American runners of all time, with a range from 1500 meters to the marathon. She excelled at all three of the sport's major disciplines--track, road, and cross country. At this writing (April 2008), she is the only American woman ever to earn an Olympic medal at a track event longer than 800 meters, and her American road-race record for 10,000 meters (31:06) still stands--yet she almost certainly did her finest running on cross country courses.

[edit] Career

Jennings was the bronze medalist at 10,000 meters in the 1992 Summer Olympics, held in Barcelona, Spain. Her time of 31:19.89 was a new American record, and it lasted until May 3, 2002, when it was finally broken by Deena Kastor in Palo Alto, California.

She won the World Cross Country Championships in 1990, 1991, and 1992. The 1992 race was held at Franklin Park in Boston, on some of the same trails where she had won several Massachusetts state high school championships. In high school in Harvard, Massachusetts, a small town far from the famed university, she ran on the boys' cross country team (there was no girls' team at the time) and, remarkably, won the league championship race. [1] Her years as a high school state champion in cross country are reminiscent of an early scene in the film Without Limits, about Steve Prefontaine, in which Prefontaine shoots out to a determined lead very early in a high school race and is good enough to keep the lead to the finish. Jennings won the U.S. National Cross Country Championship an incredible nine times. Though there was more fame to be had and money to be made in other venues, she loved cross country.

Jennings ran the Boston Marathon unofficially in 1978 and finished in 2:46, a time which would have placed third in the open women's division. In 1999, approaching age 39, she ran 2:38 officially in Boston. Her range, from a national high school record in the 1500 meters to a 2:38 marathon, is rare and impressive. Her on-and-off coach, John Babington of the Liberty Athletic Club, had a role in this range. (Perhaps her dog and training partner, Otis, a springer spaniel, did as well.) She later ran for Nike's Athletics West team.

Career Highlights: 1992 Olympic 10,000m bronze medalist; three-time World Cross Country champion (1990-1991-1992); three-time U.S. Olympian (1988, 1992, 1996); 1995 World Indoor 3000-meter silver medalist; 1993 World Indoor 3000-meter bronze medalist, fifth place in both the 1991 and 1993 World Championships at 10,000 meters; nine-time U.S. Outdoor champion

Jennings currently lives in Portland, OR.[2]

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