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Allen Johnson

American hurdler


Summary

American hurdler

FieldValue
nameAllen Johnson
imageAllen Johnson 2007.jpg
captionJohnson at 2007 ISTAF Berlin
birth_date
birth_placeWashington, D.C., U.S.
height5 ft 10 in
weight165 lb
sportSprint
eventHurdling
collegeteamNorth Carolina Tar Heels
medaltemplates

MedalGold|1997 Athens|110 m hurdles}}

Allen Kenneth Johnson (born March 1, 1971) is an American former hurdling athlete who won the gold medal in the 110 metre hurdles at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. He is also a four-time world champion.

Born in Washington, D.C., an all-round athlete, Johnson attended University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and excelled at high jump, long jump and decathlon as well as hurdles. He was the 1992 NCAA Indoor Champion for 55 meter hurdles but did not win the outdoor championship.

Career

Johnson was troubled by injury in 2000 but still made the final at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia, just missing out on adding to his medal collection by finishing fourth.

2003 in the Stade de France, saw Johnson win his fourth IAAF World Championships in Athletics 110 m hurdles title when he beat Terrence Trammell into second to overtake the three world championship gold medals that Greg Foster had won at the event.

At the 2004 Summer Olympics he tripped over a hurdle in the 2nd preliminary round and was unable to finish the race and reach the final. He was however ranked world's number 1 throughout 2004's season.

Johnson was trained by Curtis Frye, at the University of South Carolina where he served as a volunteer assistant coach. Formerly, the sprint and hurdles coach at the United States Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, CO, Johnson is now the Assistant Head Coach at the North Carolina State University under Rollie Geiger.

His personal best is 12.92 seconds, only 0.01 seconds short of the then-world record held by Colin Jackson. Johnson has legally finished 11 races in less than 13 seconds, which was the most all time until Grant Holloway secured 12 on September 6, 2024. His 12.96 (+0.4) set while winning the 2006 IAAF World Cup at age 35, is the Masters M35 World Record. Johnson officially retired in July 2010, at the age of 39. Daughter, Tristine Johnson, competes as a 2014 senior at his alma mater University of North Carolina.

Achievements

(110 Meter Hurdles unless stated)

Track records

As of 11 September 2024, Johnson holds the following track records for 110 metres hurdles.

LocationTimeWindspeed
m/sDate
Atlanta, GA12.92+0.923/06/1996
Brisbane13.16–0.405/09/2001
Carson12.99+0.224/06/2005
Chania13.22+1.514/06/2000
Chapel Hill13.190.017/05/1997
Clemson, SC13.22+0.116/05/1998
Cologne12.98+0.218/08/1995
Edmonton13.04–0.309/08/2001
Fort-de-France13.04+1.727/04/2002
Gothenburg13.00–0.112/08/1995
Hermosillo13.39+1.321/05/2005
Mexico City13.08–0.222/05/2004
Palo Alto, CA13.08–0.123/06/2002
Portland13.27+0.525/06/2000
Raleigh, NC13.22–0.512/06/1999
Rome13.01+0.807/07/1999
Sacramento, CA12.97+1.523/07/2000

References

References

  1. "Allen Johnson Bio - Air Force Academy Official Athletic Site".
  2. "Air Force Hires Olympic Gold Medalist Allen Johnson as Assistant Track Coach - Air Force Academy Official Athletic Site".
  3. "IAAF All-time Top List 110 metres hurdles".
  4. "Tristine Johnson - Track & Field".
  5. {{TFRRS
Wikipedia Source

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