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Camille French

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
New Zealand long-distance runner

Camille Buscomb
Buscomb in 2019
Personal information
NationalityNew Zealand
Born (1990-07-11)11 July 1990 (age 34)
Hamilton, New Zealand[1]
EducationUniversity of Waikato
Height1.64 m (5 ft 5 in)
Weight51 kg (112 lb)
Sport
SportLong-distance running
Event(s)10,000 m, 5,000 m, 1500 m
Coached byNic Bideau

Camille French (néeBuscomb; born 11 July 1990) is a New Zealandlong-distance runner.[2]

Early life

[edit]

Buscomb attendedSt Peter's School in Cambridge, New Zealand. She competed over 1500m in the World Youth Championships in 2007 and the 2008 Commonwealth Youth Games.[3]

From 2009, she spent two and a half years on an athletics scholarship atPurdue University in Indiana, USA.[4] She eventually transferred her studies from Purdue to theUniversity of Waikato in New Zealand, where she was offered aHillary Scholarship in 2015.[5]

Career

[edit]

After returning to New Zealand, won her first national title in 2012, over 3000 metres, and also came second in New Zealand's 800m championship.[4][6] The next year she won national the national road championships, over 10 km, and on the track won the 3000m, along with silver over 1500m.[6]

Buscomb began concentrating on the 5000m distance in 2014, setting a series of personal bests but missing the qualification mark for that year's Commonwealth Games.[7] She was New Zealand's 8 km cross-country champion that year, and also defended her 10 km road racing title from 2013.[8][9] She retained her 10 km national road title and added the 5000m as well. She was third over 1500m at the national championships.[6]

In 2015, she was the 5000m silver medalist at the World University Games.[3][10] That September she claimed her third consecutive national 10 km road championship.[11] She won a second consecutive 5000m national title, and improved her 1500m standing to second place.[6] At the end of 2015 she won half marathons in Hamilton and Auckland, having had a cyst removed from her jaw less than two months beforehand. Her efforts to qualify for the 2016 Olympics were unsuccessful, and affected by her slow recovery from that surgery ("I came back too soon and it took me a long time to realise what a toll the surgery had taken on my body," she said).[12]

She was New Zealand's 5000m champion again in 2016 (with a third place over 1500m), and also repeated her Hamilton half marathon victory of the year before.[13][12]

At the2017 World Championships in London, Buscomb finished in her heat in a time of 15:40.41 of thewomen's 5000 metres and did not qualify for the final, and in thewomen's 10,000 metres finished 30th in 33:07.53.[14]

At the2018 Commonwealth Games held on theGold Coast, Australia, she finished 12th in the5000m in 15:55.45, and 14th in10,000m in 32:23.91.

In 2021, Buscomb competed in the2020 Summer Olympics finishing 14th in her heat of5000m, in a time of 15:24.39, which did not qualify her for the final and in theOlympic 10,000m she finished 19th in 32:10.49.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"2018 CWG bio". Retrieved28 April 2018.
  2. ^"Camille Buscomb". IAAF. Retrieved11 August 2017.
  3. ^ab"Athlete profile: Camille Buscomb".olympic.org.nz. New Zealand Olympic Committee. Retrieved22 March 2018.
  4. ^abPegden, Evan (10 March 2012)."Focus and fitness pay dividends".Stuff. Retrieved22 March 2018.
  5. ^"Hamilton students among new Hillary Scholars".scoop.co.nz. 18 March 2015. Retrieved22 March 2018.
  6. ^abcd"Camille Buscomb – Athlete Profile (Athletics New Zealand Rankings and Records)".www.anzrankings.org.nz. Retrieved22 March 2018.
  7. ^Pegden, Evan (14 March 2014)."Camille Buscomb edges closer to Games qualifier". Waikato Times (Stuff). Retrieved22 March 2018.
  8. ^Pegden, Evan (23 August 2014)."Buscomb pushes herself through winter season".Stuff. Retrieved22 March 2018.
  9. ^Pegden, Evan (8 September 2014)."Camille Buscomb claims national title double". Waikato Times (Stuff). Retrieved22 March 2018.
  10. ^"NZ medal tally grows in Korea".Radio New Zealand. 12 July 2015. Retrieved22 March 2018.
  11. ^Posselt, Viv (8 September 2015)."Local runners do Cambridge proud".Stuff. Retrieved22 March 2018.
  12. ^abGullery, Lawrence (5 October 2016)."Camille Buscomb no longer 'invincible' as running career restarts". Waikato Times (Stuff). Retrieved22 March 2018.
  13. ^"2016 Lion Foundation NZ Track and Field Champs – 4/03/2016 to 6/03/2016 Caledonian Ground Results"(PDF).Athletics. 10 March 2016. p. 2. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 8 July 2016. Retrieved22 March 2018.
  14. ^"10,000 Metres Women". IAAF. Retrieved11 August 2017.

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