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Home > Fanny Blankers-Koen


 

Fanny Blankers-Koen speeding towards the gold medal in the final of the 80 m hurdles event at the 1948 Summer Olympics. Left of her is silver medallist Maureen Gardner , while 3rd place finisher Shirley Strickland is depicted on the far left.

Francina Elsje "Fanny" Blankers-Koen ( April 26, 1918January 25, 2004) was a Dutch athlete. At the 1948 Summer Olympics in London, she won four gold medals. At that time, she was already a mother of two, which was unheard of at a time where female athletes were still frowned upon by many. It earned her the nickname "The Flying Housewife".

1 Early life

She was born Fanny Koen in Lage Vuursche (near Baarn) to Arnoldus and Helena Koen. As a teenager, she enjoyed tennis, swimming, gymnastics, ice skatingIce skating is travelling on ice with skates, narrow (and sometimes parabolic) blade-like devices moulded into special boots (or, more primitively, without boots, tied to regular footwear). It is mainly done for recreation and as a sport. It is possible o and runningRunning is by definition the fastest means for an animal to move on foot. It is defined in sporting terms as a gait in which at some point all feet are off the ground at the same time. Running is a form of aerobic exercise. Jogging Jogging is a type of sl. It soon became clear she was a sports talent, but she could not decide which sport to pick. A swimming coach advised her to do athletics because there were already several top swimmers in the Netherlands at that time (such as Rie MastenbroekHendrika Wilhelmina "Rie" Mastenbroek ( February 26, 1919 November 6, 2003) was a Dutch swimmer and a triple Olympic champion. Born in Rotterdam, she started swimming under the coaching of "Ma" Braun, who had coached her daughter to an Olympic gold medal), and she would have a better chance to qualify for the Olympics in athletics.

Her first appearance in the sport was in 1935. Her first competition was a disappointment, but in her third race, she set a new National Record in the 800 mFor other uses of "metre" and "meter", see Metre (disambiguation). The metre is the basic unit of length in the International System of Units (SI: Systeme International d'Unites). It is defined as the length of the path travelled by light in absolute vacu. Fanny Koen soon made the Dutch team, although as a sprinter, not a middle distance runner. The following year, only eighteen years old, she was nominated for the 1936 OlympicThe Games of the XI Olympiad were held in 1936 in Berlin, Germany. Berlin's bid was preferred over Barcelona. Although awarded before the Nazi Party came to power in Germany, the government saw the Olympics as a golden opportunity to promote their fascist team.

In BerlinBerlin [ bɛrˈliːn ] is the national capital of Germany and its largest city, with 3,387,404 inhabitants (as of September 2004); down from 4. 5 million before World War II. Berlin is located on the rivers Spree and Havel in the northea, she participated in the high jumpThe high jump is an athletics/ track and field event in which competitors must jump over a horizontal bar placed at measured heights. History Although the event was likely competed in as early as the ancient Greek Olympics, the first recorded high jump co and the 4 × 100 m relayA relay is an electromechanical switch that uses an electromagnet to open or close one or many sets of contacts. When a current flows through the induction coil, the resulting magnetic field attracts an armature that is mechanically linked to a moving con, both held on the same day. In the high jump, she took sixth place (shared with two other jumpers) while the Dutch relay team came fifth in the final (the sixth team in the final, Germany, was disqualified).

Slowly, Koen rose to the top. In 1938, she ran her first World Record (11.0 seconds in the 100 yards), and she also won her first international medals. At the European Championships in Vienna, she won the bronze in both the 100 and 200 m, which were both won by Stanislawa Walasiewicz. Many observers, and Koen herself, expected her to do well at the upcoming Olympics, which were to be held in Helsinki in July 1940. However, the outbreak of World War II put a stop to the preparations. The Olympics were formally cancelled on May 2, 1940, a week before the Netherlands were invaded by German troops.



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