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Cathy Branta

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American runner

Cathy Easker (néeBranta; born January 6, 1963) is a retiredmiddle-distance andlong-distance runner fromSlinger, Wisconsin, USA. After achieving Wisconsin state championship high school record times (for division 2 girls) in cross country in both 1979 and 1980,[1] she competed in track and cross country for the Wisconsin Badgers. While atWisconsin, Branta won the Broderick Award (now theHonda Sports Award) as the nation's best female collegiate cross country runner for the 1984–85 season.[2][3] She won the gold medal at the1985 Summer Universiade inKobe,Japan in the women's 3,000 metres event. She set thecollegiate record in the 5,000 meters in a time of 15:07.

Cathy won the 1984USA Cross Country Championships, qualifying her to the1985 World Cross Country Championships, where she won the silver medal behindZola Budd, leading USA to the team gold medal. She also qualified to the1984 World Championships on home soil at theMeadowlands Racetrack inEast Rutherford, New Jersey, where her 10th-place finish also had been a part of the USA's team gold medal.

On October 5, 1985, she married John Easker of Wittenberg-Birnamwood, Wisconsin, who had won the state boys division 2 title in 1980 and also went on to have a successful running career at UW. They met there during their freshman year of university.[4] John also qualified to the1984 World Championships. His 28th-place finish contributed to the USA's team silver medal. In 1986, he won a separate "World Cross Country Championships Senior Men's Trials" in 1986, qualifying him to run in the1986 IAAF World Cross Country Championships. His 10th-place finish contributed to the USA's team bronze medal.

She currently coaches high school track and cross country, and teaches physical education and health in Wittenberg-Birnamwood, WI. She is married and has three children.[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"All Time Individuals At State Meets".www.wisconsinrunner.com.
  2. ^"Cathy Branta (1993) | University of Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame".Wisconsin Badgers. Retrieved2020-03-29.
  3. ^"Cross Country".CWSA. Retrieved2020-03-29.
  4. ^"They Found Love Among The Cinders".chicagotribune.com. 17 May 1985.
  5. ^"Wittenberg-Birnamwood School District - Cathy Easker".www.wittbirn.k12.wi.us.
3000 metres
(1975–1993)
5000 metres
(1995–present)
1975–1979
Amateur Athletic Union
1980–1992
The Athletics Congress
1993–present
USA Track & Field
Notes
*Distances have varied as follows: 2 Miles (1975–1986) and odd numbered years since 2015, 3000 meters (1987–2014) and even numbered years since 2014
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