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{{MedalSilver|[[2007 European Indoor Athletics Championships|2007 Birmingham]]|Pentathlon}}
{{MedalSilver|[[2007 European Indoor Athletics Championships|2007 Birmingham]]|Pentathlon}}
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'''Kelly Jade Sotherton''' (born 13 November 1976) is an [[England|English]] [[heptathlon|heptathlete]] and [[400m]] [[sprinter]]. She was the [[bronze medal]]list at the [[2004 Summer Olympics]] and was fourth at the [[2008 Summer Olympics]]. She also was a bronze at the [[2007 World Championships in Athletics]], and was the heptathlon [[gold medal]]list at the [[2006 Commonwealth Games]]. In November 2010, she announced her decision to retire from the heptathlon, due to foot and back injuries, instead focussing on the [[400 metres|400 m]].<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/athletics/9147480.stm</ref>
'''Kelly Jade Sotherton''' (born 13 November 1976) is an [[England|English]] [[heptathlon|heptathlete]] and [[400m]] [[sprinter]]. She was the [[bronze medal]]list at the [[2004 Summer Olympics]] and was fourth at the [[2008 Summer Olympics]]. She also was a bronze at the [[2007 World Championships in Athletics]], and was the heptathlon [[gold medal]]list at the [[2006 Commonwealth Games]]. In November 2010, she announced her decision to retire from the heptathlon, due to foot and back injuries. After considering " the [[Rebecca Romero]] route" she then chose instead to focus on the [[400 metres|400 m]].<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/athletics/9147480.stm ; and, The Independent, 14 February 2011</ref>


Sotherton was born in [[Newport, Isle of Wight|Newport]] on the [[Isle of Wight]]. As a teenager, she played [[netball]] for [[Hampshire]], but also won two English Schools’ championships in the heptathlon.
Sotherton was born in [[Newport, Isle of Wight|Newport]] on the [[Isle of Wight]]. As a teenager, she played [[netball]] for [[Hampshire]], but also won two English Schools’ championships in the heptathlon.
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The following year, Sotherton struggled with injuries and although she was selected for the [[2009 European Indoor Championships]] she had to withdraw due to heel problems.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/athletics/7919574.stm British trio will miss Europeans]. [[BBC Sport]] (2009-03-02). Retrieved on 2009-03-02.</ref> Despite recovering from this injury, her 2010 season was also ruined by injury as her back problems recurred.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/athletics/8697949.stm Injury wrecks heptathlete Kelly Sotherton's season]. [[BBC Sport]] (2010-05-21). Retrieved on 2010-05-26.</ref>
The following year, Sotherton struggled with injuries and although she was selected for the [[2009 European Indoor Championships]] she had to withdraw due to heel problems.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/athletics/7919574.stm British trio will miss Europeans]. [[BBC Sport]] (2009-03-02). Retrieved on 2009-03-02.</ref> Despite recovering from this injury, her 2010 season was also ruined by injury as her back problems recurred.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/athletics/8697949.stm Injury wrecks heptathlete Kelly Sotherton's season]. [[BBC Sport]] (2010-05-21). Retrieved on 2010-05-26.</ref>

==2011==
Sotherton completed "the first step of her reinvention as a 400m specialist", with a victory in the 400m final in 53.46 sec, at the [[English Institute of Sport]] indoor arena in [[Sheffield]] on 13 February 2011. Overcome at her win, she explained a temporary breakdown at trackside; " When I prolapsed the disc in my back it was career-threatening. I had to make a decision whether to end my career or try something new." It was Sotherton's first national title in a track event. <ref> The Independent, 14 February 2011 </ref>


==Personal bests==
==Personal bests==

Revision as of 02:46, 16 February 2011

Kelly Sotherton

Medal record
Women's athletics
Representing  Great Britain
Olympic Games
Bronze medal – third place 2004 Athens Heptathlon
World Championships
Bronze medal – third place 2007 Osaka Heptathlon
Commonwealth Games
Gold medal – first place 2006 Melbourne Heptathlon
World Indoor Championships
Silver medal – second place 2008 Valencia Pentathlon
European Indoor Championships
Silver medal – second place 2005 Madrid Pentathlon
Silver medal – second place 2007 Birmingham Pentathlon

Kelly Jade Sotherton (born 13 November 1976) is an English heptathlete and 400m sprinter. She was the bronze medallist at the 2004 Summer Olympics and was fourth at the 2008 Summer Olympics. She also was a bronze at the 2007 World Championships in Athletics, and was the heptathlon gold medallist at the 2006 Commonwealth Games. In November 2010, she announced her decision to retire from the heptathlon, due to foot and back injuries. After considering " the Rebecca Romero route" she then chose instead to focus on the 400 m.[1]

Sotherton was born in Newport on the Isle of Wight. As a teenager, she played netball for Hampshire, but also won two English Schools’ championships in the heptathlon.

She moved to the Midlands in order to train with 2000 Olympic heptathlon champion Denise Lewis. She made her senior British team debut in 2002. She is a member of Birchfield Harriers athletics club.

The javelin throw is clearly her weakest discipline and has been cited as the main reason for her lack of medals at the 2005 World Championships and 2006 European Championships.

Personal life

Sotherton trains at the grounds of the athletics club Birchfield Harriers, which is based in Birmingham, England. She was educated at Ryde High School and Brunel University.

2004

She gained international recognition in 2004 when she unexpectedly won a bronze medal at the Summer Olympics in Athens behind Carolina Klüft (gold) and Austra Skujyte (silver), scoring 6424 points and finishing ahead of defending Olympic champion Lewis, who dropped out due to injury.

2005

In March 2005 she competed in the European Indoor Championships, where she took silver once again behind Klüft.
At Götzis, Austria in May Sotherton was again beaten into second, behind the Swede, but she did record a personal best of 6547 points.
At the AAA's National Championship in July, Sotherton competed in four individual events and took her first senior national title, winning the long jump with a jump of 6.48 metres.
At the 2005 World Championships Sotherton had held a medal position going into the sixth event, despite some below average performances, but a disastrous javelin saw her drop out of contention. Sotherton did manage to knock nearly 2.5 seconds off her personal best to win the final 800 m, but despite closing the overall gap on those ahead she only finished fifth.

2006

In March 2006 Kelly Sotherton competed for England in the hepathlon at the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne. She took gold with a score of 6396, ahead of Kylie Wheeler of Australia (silver) and her team mate Jessica Ennis (bronze).

In August 2006 she competed for Great Britain and Northern Ireland in the hepathlon at the 2006 European Athletics Championships in Gothenburg. She came seventh ahead of her team mate Jessica Ennis, after a disappointing javelin event caused her to drop from second.

2007

Kelly Sotherton at an athletics meeting in The Netherlands, 2007

2007 saw Great Britain host the European Indoor Championships, in Birmingham.

Carolina Klüft led after the hurdles, but Sotherton and compatriot Jessica Ennis trailed closely behind. The high jump saw Ennis take the lead over Klüft and Sotherton, with a jump of 1.91, but Sotherton set a personal best for indoors of 1.88. Seven points separated Klüft and Sotherton. In the shot put, Sotherton took a two-point lead ahead of defending champion Klüft. The long jump saw Klüft take a 24-point lead over the Briton. In the 800 m, a strong event for Sotherton, she needed to take 1.6 seconds from Klüft to see her beaten for the first time since 2002. Sotherton set a personal best 2:12.54, but Klüft also underscored her previous mark to win by 17 points. This was her smallest winning margin ever. Sotherton took silver, and Karin Ruckstuhl the bronze. In one of the best pentathlons of all time, many athletes set national records and Klüft and Sotherton rose to second and fourth on the all-time lists respectively. Sotherton also set a Commonwealth record by 200 points.

In 2007, the World Championships were held in the Japanese city of Osaka. Sotherton started the first day with a personal best of 13.21 seconds in the 100 metres hurdles. She then came within a centimetre of her personal best in the high jump with a 1.86 m performance. A season's best of 14.14 m followed in the shot put and Sotherton ended the day with a second personal best in the 200 m, with 23.40. On the second day, Sotherton hit 6.68 m in the long jump, to stay in medal contention, but again the javelin saw a weak performance, with Sotherton throwing just 31.90, finishing last. However, Sotherton put in a strong performance in the 800 m, running 2:11.58 to just beat teammate Jessica Ennis to the bronze medal, with 6,510 points.

2007 World Championships Results (August 25-26)

Event Result Position Points Overall Position Extra
100 metres hurdles 13.21 secs (PB) 3rd (PB) 1093 3rd Jessica Ennis wins (12.97, PB); Carolina Klüft 2nd (13.15, PB) (both ran in her heat)
High Jump 1.86 m 4th 1054 4th Carolina Klüft wins (1.95 m, PB); Jessica Ennis is 3rd (1.89 m)
Shot put 14.14m (SB) 9th 803 3rd
200 metres 23.40 secs (PB) 3rd 1039 3rd Jessica Ennis wins (23.15, PB); Klüft 2nd (23.38, SB) (both ran in her heat)
Long jump 6.68m (PB) 3rd 1066 3rd Lyudmila Blonska wins (6.88m, PB); Klüft 2nd (6.85m, SB)
Javelin 31.90m (SB) 32nd 513 4th Lilli Schwarzkopf wins (54.44m, PB); Klüft 7th (47.98m, SB)
800 metres 2:11.58 3rd 942 3rd Sotherton lead for most of the way, but Jessica Ennis proved stronger to win the race in 2:11.39.
Heptathlon 6510 3rd Klüft set a European Record of 7,032 to win from Blonska, while Ennis finished fourth.

2008–09

In February 2008, Sotherton competed in a three-event triathlon, at the Indoor Grand Prix, in Birmingham, against a field including Carolina Klüft.

Sotherton started with a below-par performance in the long jump, allowing Klüft to take the lead. Sotherton then won the 60 m hurdles in a personal best of 8.17 seconds. Despite running a personal best (and the fastest time by a Briton that season) of 52.47 seconds in the 400m, Sotherton took second behind Klüft, who won by 18 points.

After Klüft pulled out of the World Indoor Championships in Valencia, Sotherton became favourite for the gold medal. She lived up to expectation in the 60 m hurdles, winning in 8.25 seconds. However, Sotherton put in a well below-par berformance in the high jump, achieving only 1.81 m, against Tia Hellebaut's 1.99 m., and Sotherton slipped to third and then to fifth after the shot put. Sotherton then won the long jump with 6.45 m, moving into second, behind Hellebaut, who set a Belgian record of 6.41 m. Hellebaut held a considerable lead entering the final event, the 800 m. Sotherton needed to beat the Belgian by 7.7 seconds to win gold. Sotherton set a personal best of 2:09.95, with Hellebaut collapsing over the line in 2:16.42, 6.47 seconds behind Sotherton, and the Briton had to again settle for silver.

After Klüft's retirement from heptathlon in 2008, Sotherton had been tipped by many people to take gold at the 2008 Olympics, including Klüft herself. However after a disappointing performance she could only manage 5th place in the competition. Lyudmila Blonska was later disqualified for failing a doping test and Sotherton was upgraded to fourth.[2] She had previously labelled Blonska a cheat, and questioned the validity of Blonska's silver medal at the World Championships in 2007.[3] She was also part of the 4 × 400 m relay team which finished fifth in the final.

The following year, Sotherton struggled with injuries and although she was selected for the 2009 European Indoor Championships she had to withdraw due to heel problems.[4] Despite recovering from this injury, her 2010 season was also ruined by injury as her back problems recurred.[5]

2011

Sotherton completed "the first step of her reinvention as a 400m specialist", with a victory in the 400m final in 53.46 sec, at the English Institute of Sport indoor arena in Sheffield on 13 February 2011. Overcome at her win, she explained a temporary breakdown at trackside; " When I prolapsed the disc in my back it was career-threatening. I had to make a decision whether to end my career or try something new." It was Sotherton's first national title in a track event. [6]

Personal bests

Event Data
200 m 23.39 secs
400 m (indoor) 52.47 secs
800 m 2mins 07.94 secs
100 m hurdles 13.18 secs
High jump 1.87 m
Long jump 6.79 m
Shot put 14.66 m
Javelin 40.81 m
Pentathlon (indoor) 4927 points
Heptathlon 6547 points

Achievements

Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes
Representing  United Kingdom
1997 Island Games Jersey, Channel Islands[7] 1st 100 m GR (12.02 seconds)
100 m hurdles GR (14.39 seconds)
Long jump GR (5.84 m)
European U23 Championships Turku, Finland 10th Heptathlon
2002 Commonwealth Games Manchester, England 7th Heptathlon
2004 European Indoor Cup Leipzig, Germany 4th Long jump
European Cup Bydgoszcz, Poland 2nd Long jump
Summer Olympics Athens, Greece 3rd Heptathlon
2005 European Indoor Championship Madrid, Spain 2nd Pentathlon
World Championships Helsinki, Finland 8th Long jump
5th Heptathlon
2006 Commonwealth Games Melbourne, Australia 1st Heptathlon
European Cup Malaga, Spain 5th Long jump
European Championships Gothenburg, Sweden 7th Heptathlon
8th (qualifiers) Long jump
World Athletics Final Stuttgart, Germany 8th Long jump
2007 European Indoor Championships Birmingham, United Kingdom 2nd Pentathlon
World Championships Osaka, Japan 3rd Heptathlon
2008 World Indoor Championships Valencia, Spain 2nd Pentathlon
Summer Olympics Beijing, China 4th Heptathlon
5th 4×400 m relay

References

External links


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