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Lauren Wells (hurdler)

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Australian athletics competitor

Lauren Boden
Personal information
NationalityAustralian
Born (1988-08-03)3 August 1988 (age 37)
Height1.79 m (5 ft10+12 in) (2012)
Weight66 kg (146 lb) (2012)
Sport
Country Australia
SportAthletics
Event(s)
400 metre hurdles
400 metres
Long jump
Coached byMatt Beckenham

Lauren Boden (born 3 August 1988) is an Australianathletics competitor. Her events are the 400 metrehurdles, 400 metres andlong jump. She was the youngest woman to win the 400 metres hurdle event at the Australian national championships. She has competed in the long jump event and the 400 metres hurdle event at theWorld University Games. She has competed at the2006 and2010 Commonwealth Games and the2012 and2016 Summer Olympics in the 400 metre hurdles event.

Personal

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Boden was born on 3 August 1988 inCanberra.[1][2][3][4][5] She attended Kaleen Primary School before going to high school atLyneham High School andDaramalan College.[4] She then attended theUniversity of Canberra, where she earned a Bachelor of Science in Psychology while majoring in sport science.[2][4] In 2004, she was named the ACT Sports Star of the Year – Junior Athlete and earned the Pierre de Coubertin Award.[3] As of 2012[update], she lives in Canberra.[1][2][3][4]

Boden is 179 centimetres (70 in) tall and weighs 66 kilograms (146 lb).[3][4]

People confuse her forJana Pittman.[1][2] They look alike and have a similar hurdling style. Many news stories about Boden compare her to Pittman.[1]

Athletics

[edit]

Boden is an athletics competitor in the 400 metre hurdles event, 400 metres event and the long jump.[1][2][5] She started competing in athletics when she was five years old.[3] She competes for the North Canberra/Gungahlin athletics club.[3] She is coached byMatt Beckenham,[1][3] became her coach in 2003.[1] Her training partner isMelissa Breen.[6] She has held an athletics scholarship from theACT Academy of Sport[2] and theAustralian Institute of Sport.[3][4] Running for the Australian national team, she wears number 81.[3]

Boden will represent Australia at the2012 Summer Olympics,[1][2] where she made her Olympic debut in the 400 metre hurdle event[3] as Australia's only competitor in the event.[4]

400 metre hurdles

[edit]

Boden started competing in open age races when she was sixteen years old.[1]

In 2005, Boden won the 400 metres hurdles event at the Australian national championships.[2] She was the youngest person to win the event.[2][4] She repeated her victory in the event at the 2007, 2008, 2010 and 2011 Australian national championships.[2] Her personal best in the 400 metre hurdles is 55.25 seconds.[2] That year she also competed in theWorld Youth Championships.[7]

As a seventeen-year-old, Boden competed in the 400 metre hurdles event at the2006 Commonwealth Games,[1][4] but did not make the finals.[4] She also competed but did not reach the final at the2006 World Junior Championships.[7] She competed in the event again in the2010 Commonwealth Games where she finished fourth.[4]

Boden competed at theWorld University Games inBangkok in 2007, where she finished fourth in the qualifying round with a time of 58.72 seconds.[3] At the 2009 edition in Belgrade, she finished fifth in the finals with a time of 56.81 seconds.[3]

In 2011 she competed in her first seniorWorld Championships, in Daegu, reaching the semifinal.[7]

In February 2012, Boden clocked an A-standard Olympic qualifying time of 55.45 seconds at the Sydney Track Classic.[1] Her (then) personal best time in the event was 55.25 seconds was set on 8 May 2010 inOsaka.[3][5]

In 2013, she set a new personal best of 55.08 atOordegem-Lede, and competed again at the world championships.[7]

She competed in the 400 m hurdles at the2014 Commonwealth Games and was part of the Australian 4 x 400 m team. She finished in 4th in both events.[8]

She reached the World Championships again in2015, the 2016 Olympics and the2017 World Championship.[7]

Long jump

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In 2007, Boden competed in the long jump event at the Australian national championships, where she finished second with 6.39m with an illegal tailwind (+4.1 m/s).[3] That same year, she competed at theWorld University Games inBangkok where she finished sixth with a jump of 6.40 metres.[3]

400 metres

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Boden beat her personal best time during a meet in Dormagen, Germany in the last weekend in June 2012. Her new personal best is 52.82.[5][6] Her previous best time in the event was 53.51 seconds.[5]

References

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  1. ^abcdefghijkGullan, Scott (1 March 2012)."Don't mistake Lauren Boden for Jana Pittman". Herald Sun. Retrieved3 July 2012.
  2. ^abcdefghijk"Olympic profile: Lauren Boden". Canberra: Canberra Times. Retrieved3 July 2012.
  3. ^abcdefghijklmno"Athletics Australia - Boden, Lauren".www.athletics.com.au. Athletics Australia. Archived fromthe original on 24 September 2013. Retrieved29 August 2017.
  4. ^abcdefghijk"London 2012 - Lauren Boden". Australian Olympic Committee. Archived fromthe original on 3 August 2012. Retrieved3 July 2012.
  5. ^abcde"Lauren Boden". Athletics ACT. 3 August 1988. Retrieved3 July 2012.
  6. ^ab"Boden and Breen in fast lane". Canberra Times. Retrieved3 July 2012.
  7. ^abcde"IAAF: Lauren Wells | Profile".iaaf.org. Retrieved29 August 2017.
  8. ^"Glasgow 2014 - Lauren Wells Profile".g2014results.thecgf.com (in Spanish). Retrieved29 August 2017.
Australian athletes at the2011 World Championships in Athletics
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