Personal information | |||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nationality | Australian | ||||||||||||||||||||
Born | (2005-01-08)8 January 2005 (age 20) Nottingham,England | ||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 173 cm (5 ft 8 in) | ||||||||||||||||||||
Sport | |||||||||||||||||||||
Sport | Track and Field | ||||||||||||||||||||
Event | Sprint | ||||||||||||||||||||
Achievements and titles | |||||||||||||||||||||
Personalbests | 60m: 7.14 (2025)NR 100m: 11.10 (2024)NR 200m: 22.88 (2024) 200mi: 22.65 (2025) 4 x100m: 42.48 (2024)AR | ||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
|
Torrie Lewis (born 8 January 2005) is an Australian track and field athlete who competes as a sprinter. She has won Australian national titles over100m and200m. In January 2024, she set a new Australian 100m national record of 11.10 seconds.[1]
Lewis was born inNottingham,[2] England to a father ofJamaican andIndian descent and a mother ofScottish descent.[3] At the age of six she moved to Australia and was a promising gymnast in her early years inNewcastle, New South Wales, before turning her full attention to the track.[2] She later moved toBrisbane,Queensland where she attendedSt Peters Lutheran College.[4]
Lewis ran 11.33 seconds for the100m aged 16 years-old which placed her as the third fastest U18 women in the world, behind onlyTina Clayton of Jamaica and AmericanShawnti Jackson.
In April 2023, aged 18 years, she won the100m and200m sprint double at the Australian national athletics championships.[5][6]
On 27 January 2024, Lewis ran 11.10 (+1.6) in Canberra to become both (i) the Australian under-20 women's100 metres record holder, surpassingRaelene Boyle's longstanding under-20 record of 11.20 set at altitude at the1968 Olympic Games in Mexico, and (ii) the Australian Women's open100 metres record holder, passingMelissa Breen's previous mark of 11.11 set in 2014, also in Canberra.[7] Lewis's 11.10 places her 25th on the world top all-time under-20 athlete list.[8][circular reference]
In April 2024, Lewis lowered her personal best for the 200 metres to 22.94 seconds in a heat at the Australian National championships in Adelaide where she went on to win gold ahead ofMia Gross.[9][10] She did not defend her 100m national title to focus on the 200m ahead of the Olympics.[11] Lewis made her Diamond League debut in the 200m at the first meet of 2024 in Xiamen, China, with a spectacular, unexpected win from lane 9 over Sha'carri Richardson and other outstanding athletes.[12] She ran as part of the Australian 4x100m relay team at the 2024World Relays Championships inNassau, Bahamas.[13]
Lewis represented Australia in the2024 Summer Olympics in Paris in the 200m, achieving a then PB of 22.89 in the heats and reaching thesemi-finals.,[14] and she also competed in the4x100m relay at the Games.[15] She won silver in the 200 metres at the2024 World Athletics U20 Championships inLima, Peru in August 2024, running a personal best 22.88 seconds.[16]
Lewis, along withEbony Lane,Bree Masters,Kristie Edwards andElla Connolly, was part of an Australian 4x100m relay team that broke the Oceania and thus national records three times in 2024, starting with a time of 42.94 seconds at the Sydney Track Classic in March 2024;[17] then 42.83 in early May in the heats of the2024 World Relay Championships at theThomas Robinson Stadium,Nassau,Bahamas;[18] then, finally, at theLondon Diamond Leagues Athletics Meet where they ran 42.48 seconds.[19]
Lewis opened her 2025 season on 29 January running 7.14s in the60 metres final in theBelgrade Indoor Meeting to set a new Australian record for the event (indoor and outdoor).[20] At her next indoor meet she ran 22.65 s to win her first short track 200m race, 0.01 s offMelinda Gainsford-Taylor's Australian and Oceanian area short track record (set when MGT won theWomen's 200 metres at the 1995 IAAF World Indoor Championships).[21] She was selected for the 60 metres and 4x40 relay at the2025 World Athletics Indoor Championships inNanjing in March 2025.[22]
Lewis hasceliac disease.[23]