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Voula Patoulidou
Greek athlete

Voula Patoulidou

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Greek athlete
Places
Work field
Gender
Female
Place of birth
Florina
Age
59 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Paraskevi ("Voula") Patoulidou (Greek: Παρασκευή "Βούλα" Πατουλίδου, born 29 March 1965) was born in Tripotamo (now part of Florina). A prolific athlete, Patoulidou throughout her athletics career competed in the 100 metres, 100 metres hurdles and in the long jump events. Patoulidou became a Greek sporting legend in 1992, when she was the surprise winner of the Women's 100 m hurdles race at the Olympic Games in Barcelona. She was the candidate for the Prefecture of Thessaloniki in the local elections of Autumn 2006 supported by the opposition party of PASOK, but lost the election to Panagiotis Psomiadis.

Personal bests

DateEventVenuePerformance
10 February 199060 metresGhent, Belgium7.29 s
4 March 199060 m hurdlesGlasgow, Scotland8.08 s
14 July 1990100 metresTrikala, Greece11.27 s
6 August 1992100 m hurdlesBarcelona, Spain12.64 s NR
4 June 1995Long jumpChania, Greece6.71 m

Barcelona 1992

On 5 August 1992, Patoulidou was celebrating for having qualified for the final in the 100 m hurdles by improving her personal best from 12.96 (set in the qualifying round) to 12.88 seconds in the semi-finals. This success made her the first Greek woman ever to reach a track final in the Olympic Games, a great feat in its own right.

One day later, however, one of the biggest upsets in the history of the Olympic Games was to take place. The clear favourite of the 100 m hurdles final, Gail Devers of the United States, made a mistake and tripped on the last hurdle. Patoulidou took advantage and lunged her body forward for the finishing line. Having crossed the line in 12.64 seconds (a Greek national record that still stands), Patoulidou immediately threw her hands in the air celebrating what she thought was a silver medal. When she watched the replay of the race on the stadium's big screen and realised that she had won the race, Patoulidou fell to her knees and put her hands over her face in astonishment. In her first interview to the Greek journalists minutes after the race, Patoulidou dedicated her medal to her home country by saying “For Greece, dammit!”, a catchphrase that is still in use.

The official results:

  1. Paraskevi Patoulidou (GRE) - 12.64
  2. LaVonna Martin (USA) - 12.69
  3. Yordanka Donkova (BUL) - 12.70
  4. Lynda Tolbert-Goode (USA) - 12.75
  5. Gail Devers (USA) - 12.75
  6. Aliuska Lopez (CUB) - 12.87
  7. Natalya Kolovanova (CIS) - 13.01
  8. Odalys Adams (CUB) - 13.57

The aftermath

The unheralded victory made Patoulidou the first female Greek sportswoman to win an Olympic gold medal, Along with Pyrros Dimas, who won a gold medal in weightlifting during the same Games, Patoulidou is considered to have inaugurated a new era for Greek sports. Notably, Greek athletes often refer to Patoulidou's triumph as the defining moment and inspiration in their quest for Olympic success. After the 2 medals in 1992 the medal haul for Greece at the Olympics increased to 8 in 1996, 13 in 2000 and 16 in 2004.

After 1992

After her Olympic gold medal Patoulidou decided to switch back to the long jump, her first love, believing that she had achieved as much as possible in the 100 m hurdles. She is vindicated for her choice when she participated in her second Olympic Games' Final, in the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, finishing 10th.

In the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games, Patoulidou was a member of the 4 × 100 m relay team that reached the semi-finals and ended up in the 13th place. She was given an honorary place in the 4 × 100 m relay team in the Athens Olympic Games in 2004, participating for the fifth time in the Olympic Games at the age of 39.

She was the only woman amongst the five Greek sporting legends chosen to be the penultimate runners in the 2004 Olympic torch relay, along with Nick Galis, Mimis Domazos, Kakhi Kakhiashvili and Ioannis Melissanidis (see 2004 Summer Olympics Opening Ceremony). She was also one of the penultimate runners of the 1996 torch relay in Atlanta, joining Evander Holyfield and Janet Evans.

International competitions

YearCompetitionVenuePositionEventNotes
1987Mediterranean GamesLatakia, Syria6thLong jump5.54 m
1988Olympic GamesSeoul, South Korea41st (h)100 m11.85
15th (h)4 × 100 m relay45.44
1989European Indoor ChampionshipsThe Hague, Netherlands9th (h)60 m7.42
World Indoor ChampionshipsBudapest, Hungary11th (sf)60 m7.47
1990European Indoor ChampionshipsGlasgow, United Kingdom15th (h)60 m7.44
7th (sf)60 m hurdles8.08
Balkan GamesIstanbul, Turkey1st100 m
1st100 m hurdles
European ChampionshipsSplit, Yugoslavia13th (sf)100 m11.62
11th (sf)100 m hurdles13.07
1991Mediterranean GamesAthens, Greece1st100 m11.48
22nd (h)100 m hurdles13.41
World ChampionshipsTokyo, Japan14th (sf)100 m11.51
14th (sf)100 m hurdles11.51
1992European Indoor ChampionshipsGenoa, Italy17th (h)60 m hurdles8.33
Olympic GamesBarcelona, Spain1st100 m hurdles12.64 (NR)
1994European Indoor ChampionshipsParis, France17th (q)Long jump5.98 m
Balkan GamesTrikala, Greece1stLong jump
1995World Indoor ChampionshipsBarcelona, Spain10thLong jump6.44 m
World ChampionshipsGothenburg, SwedenLong jumpNM
1996European Indoor ChampionshipsStockholm, Sweden11thLong jump6.15 m
Olympic GamesAtlanta, United States10thLong jump6.37 m
1997World Indoor ChampionshipsParis, FranceLong jumpNM
World ChampionshipsAthens, Greece36th (q)Long jump5.90 m
1999World ChampionshipsSeville, Spain13th (h)4 × 100 m relay44.68
2000European Indoor ChampionshipsGhent, Belgium20th (h)60 m7.39
Olympic GamesSydney, Australia46th (h)100 m11.65
13th (sf)4 × 100 m relay43.53
2001World Indoor ChampionshipsLisbon, Portugal17th (sf)60 m7.34
2002European Indoor ChampionshipsVienna, Austria18th (h)60 m7.48

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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