Debbie Ferguson Mckenzie - Place of Birth, Date of Birth, Age, Wiki, Facts, Net Worth, Birthday, Biography and Family

Debbie Ferguson Mckenzie, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Family, Facts, Age, Net Worth, Biography and More in FamedBorn.com


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Jan 16, 1976 Nassau, New Providence, Bahamas 48 years old

athletics competitor

Capricorn

About Debbie Ferguson Mckenzie

  • Debbie Ferguson-McKenzie (born 16 January 1976) is a former Bahamian sprint athlete who specialised in the 100 and 200 metres.
  • Ferguson-Mckenzie participated in five Olympics. Ferguson-McKenzie is assistant coach of track and field at University of Kentucky.
  • Previously, she coached for four years at the University of Houston.In 1995, she was awarded the Austin Sealy Trophy for the most outstanding athlete of the 1995 CARIFTA Games.
  • In total she won 7 gold, 9 silver, and 2 bronze CARIFTA Games medals. She had her first major successes with the Bahamian 4×100 metres relay team, winning gold at the Pan American Games and World Championships in Athletics in 1999, and taking another gold at the Olympic Games the following year.
  • She won her first individual gold medal at the 2001 World Championships – having initially won silver, gold medallist Marion Jones was later disqualified. The 2002 season was a career high for Ferguson-McKenzie: she won five gold medals, with victories at the IAAF World Cup and Grand Prix Final, and a 100 m, 200 m and relay gold at the 2002 Commonwealth Games.
  • Her performance in the 100 m remains a personal best, and her time in the 200 m was a commonwealth games record and fastest by any athlete that year.
  • She won her only individual Olympic medal in 2004, taking bronze in the 200 m.
  • Injury ruled her out for the whole of 2005.
  • She failed to reach the finals at the 2007 World Championships, unable to compete with the new generation of American and Jamaican sprinters.
  • However, she managed to reach the 100 and 200 metres finals at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. She was the previous 200 m national record holder with a best of 22.19 seconds.
  • Her record was broken by Shaunae Miller-Uibo (22.05 seconds) at the 2016 Jamaica Grand Prix.
  • Her 100 m best (10.91) is the second fastest time by a Bahamian after Chandra Sturrup. In 2014 Ferguson-McKenzie became the women's sprints and hurdles coach for the track and field program at the University of Houston.

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