Sitemap | FAQ | So they said | Links | Link to us | Thanks! | Feedback EESTI KEELESIN ENGLISH
Decathlon2000 Reklaam
Log in:
 
 
Register as user
Lost your password?

DECATHLETES

Biographies

Arthur Abele
Konstantin Akhapkin
Aleksandr Apaichev
Nikolai Avilov
Romain Barras
Pascal Behrenbruch
Francisco Javier Benet
Claston Bernard
Alain Blondel
Frank Busemann
Sebastian Chmara
Bryan Clay
Henrik Dagard
Grigori Degtyaryov
Robert de Wit
Stefan Drews
Aleksei Drozdov
Tomaš Dvorak
Uwe Freimuth
Steve Fritz
Ramil Ganiyev
Yordani Garcia
Jagan Hames
Trey Hardee
Jon Ryan Harlan
Laurent Hernu
Jürgen Hingsen
Chris Huffins
Eduard Hämäläinen
Klaus Isekenmeier
Kip Janvrin
Bruce Jenner
Dave Johnson
Dmitri Karpov
Indrek Kaseorg
Olexiy Kasyanov
Gernot Kellermayr
Guido Kratschmer
Andrei Krauchanka
Valter Külvet
Sebastien Levicq
Dennis Leyckes
Lev Lobodin
Dean Macey
Mike Maczey
Jon Arnar Magnusson
Eugene Martineau
Paul Meier
Norman Müller
Andrei Nazarov
Andre Niklaus
Erki Nool
Dan O'Brien
Jaakko Ojaniemi
Mikk Pahapill
Tom Pappas
Antonio Penalver
Christian Plaziat
Simon Poelman
Aleksandr Pogorelov
Qi Haifeng
Kristjan Rahnu
Andres Raja
Jiri Ryba
Christian Schenk
Stefan Schmid
Michael Schrader
Roman Šebrle
Maurice Smith
Michael Smith
Deszö Szabo
Leonel Suarez
Aleksei Sysoyev
Paul Terek
Daley Thompson
Indrek Turi
Torsten Voss
Chiel Warners
Siegfried Wentz
Robert Zmelik
Attila Zsivoczky
Aleksandr Yurkov

PrintDecathletes » Daley Thompson

Daley Thompson

Last change: 06.03.2008
Add your comment and ratingAdd your comment and rating
No comments

Daley ThompsonDaley Thompson claims more decathlon honors than anybody before him. He is the only man in any event to win two Olympic gold medals and a world championship. Add four world records, three Commonwealth titles, and a pair of European crowns and you have Francis M. “Daley” Thompson. Born of a Scottish mother and Nigerian father who named him Adodele (an African name shortened to “Dele” and by his friends to “Daley”), he is as ferocious on the track as he is amiable off.

Daley was born in Kensington, London, July 30th, 1958. He stands 1.84m and weights 88 kilos. His athletic career started at boarding school, where he gave early notice of his all-around ability. He competed in his first decathlon when he was 16. A year later he won the AAA title and qualified for the Montreal Games, where he finished a little-noticed 18th. But Bruce Jenner noticed him and claims later that Daley never stopped asking him questions. The next year, in his first match-up with Jürgen Hingsen, Daley won the European Junior title. He went on to score 8000 twice that year.

His first major international win came in Edmonton, Canada, in 1978, the Commonwealth Games title. But he lost the European championships in Prague to Russian Aleksandr Grebenyuk. It was his last defeat until 1987. A new world record of 8622 (8648) and the Olympic title in Moskva followed in 1980. In 1982 he trained in San Diego and London. Daley was rewarded with two more world records, the second coming in Athens, where he captured the European Championships with 8743 (8774). In 1983, despite groin and back injuries, Daley went on to win the initial World Championships in Helsinki with score of 8666 (8714). But by 1984, Hingsen, the ever-present nemesis, had pushed the world mark up several notches, posing an Olympic threat. When Daley heard that Hingsen expected to leave Los Angeles with the gold medal in 1984, he grinned. “The only way he’ll do that is to steal mine,” he said.

It was during the discus competition in LA that Thompson revealed the truest part of his character, the remarkable competitiveness that was to stamp his entire career. After two awful throws and a near lifetime best by Hingsen, Daley suddenly found himself trailing. “It was like I went to the cliff and looked over the edge,” he later remarked. But he never hesitated on his final toss. It went out low but with terrific force, landing at 46.56m, pushing him back to a lead he never relinquished. For Thompson’s career, that was his moment of truth.

Commonwealth and European titles followed in 1986, the latter over Hingsen again. He was married in 1987. Injured, he stuck it out in the World Championships in Roma before losing his crown to workmanlike Torsten Voss of the GDR – his first defeat in nine seasons. It was a similarly difficult year in 1988. A daughter arrived, and another injury reduced his effectiveness at the Soul Olympic Games. Again an East German, this time Christian Schenk, replaced him as Olympic champion. Daley barely missed the bronze medal.

Daley’s competitive ability has brought him unparalleled decathlon success. He won 19 of 31 meets and every major title open to him. Interestingly, despite having competed in four decathlons in Wales and one in Scotland, he has never done a 10-eventer in England.


No comments
Add your comment and rating »

© 1999-2010 Decathlon 2000 - All Rights Reserved.