French sprinter (born 1973)
Christine Arron (born 13 September 1973) is a former track and field sprinter , who competed internationally for France in the 60 metres , 100 metres , 200 metres and the 4 × 100 metres relay . She is one of the ten fastest female 100 metres sprinter of all time with 10.73 seconds which is still the European record . She set the record when winning at the 1998 European Championships , where she also won a gold medal in the 4 × 100 m relay. Also in the relay, she is a 2003 World Championship gold medallist and a 2004 Olympic bronze medallist.[ 2]
Running career
Born in Les Abymes , Guadeloupe , Arron arrived in Metropolitan France in 1990 and first trained with Fernand Urtebise, who also coached the former 400 metres hurdles and 4 × 400 metres relay world champion Stephane Diagana .
On 19 Aug 1998, Arron won the 100 metres gold medal at the 1998 European Championships in Budapest by finishing the final in a new European record time of 10.73 seconds. Her time of 10.73 seconds made her then the world's second-fastest ever, female 100 metres sprinter, behind Florence Griffith-Joyner (10.49 seconds, set in 1988). She also won the 4 × 100 metres relay gold medal at the same championships. She was named the 1998 European Women's Athlete of the Year .
In 2001, after a heavy training period in the US with John Smith and the HSI group, Arron quit training for a year, saying she was physically exhausted from the experience. "It was hell. Every morning I wondered how I was going to put up with the burden of training ." She had a hip injury which kept her out of the 2001 World Championships .
Arron was also the anchor runner of the French 4 × 100 relay team which upset the heavy favourites the US to win the gold medal at the 2003 World Championships in Paris. She recovered from 3 m behind the newly crowned, 100 m 2003 World Champion, Torri Edwards , to give the home crowd at the Stade de France an unexpected joy.
Arron won her only Olympic medal, a bronze medal, in the 4 × 100 m relay at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece .
In August 2005, Arron won a bronze medal in the 100 metres and
200 metres at the 2005 World Championships .
At the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing , Arron competed in the 100 metres event. In her first round heat, she placed first in front of Lauryn Williams and Tahesia Harrigan in a time of 11.37 sec to advance to the second round. But in the second round, she failed to advance to the semi-finals as her time of 11.36 sec was only the fourth fastest time of her heat, behind Debbie Ferguson , Oludamola Osayomi and Vida Anim , causing her elimination from the event.[citation needed ]
As of September 2023, Arron is the world's ninth-fastest, female 100 metres sprinter (10.73 sec) of all time.[ 3] Considering the controversy surrounding the performances of the world record-holder (10.49 sec, set in 1988), Florence Griffith-Joyner , many considered Arron's time of 10.73 sec. set during the 1998 European Championships to be the 'true' world record. Besides Griffith-Joyner, only Marion Jones , Carmelita Jeter , Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce , Elaine Thompson-Herah , Shericka Jackson , Marie-Josée Ta Lou and Sha'Carri Richardson have run faster than Arron in the 100 metres.[ 3]
In December 2012, Arron announced her retirement from athletics . She was expecting her second child then. She did not rule out the possibility of returning to athletics competition after the birth of her second child.
[ 4]
On 9 October 2013, Arron was awarded the Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur by French President François Hollande in the Élysée Palace .[ 5]
Views on doping
Arron has voiced her annoyance with Marion Jones , her fiercest rival during her career: "She has lied for years [...] She treated everyone as idiots. I'm not shocked she is going to jail. Many people criticised me because I was always the one who lost in the Jones-Arron battle, even if I had very good results. We started running together in 1997. She has stolen my best years. Everything could have been different for me."[ 6]
Family
In 2002, Arron gave birth to her first child, a son by the name of Ethan. On 16 May 2013, Arron gave birth to her second child, a daughter by the name of Cassandre. Cassandre's father Benjamin Compaoré , a French triple jumper, became Arron's companion in 2009.[ 7] -
Achievements
Year
Competition
Venue
Position
Event
Notes
Representing Guadeloupe
1988
1988 CARIFTA Games (youth)
Kingston, Jamaica
3rd
100 m
12.04
1992
1992 CARIFTA Games (junior)
Nassau, Bahamas
1st
100m
11.31 w
3rd
4 × 100 m
45.79
Representing France
1992
World Junior Championships
Seoul , South Korea
12th (sf)
100m
11.85 (wind: +1.2 m/s)
5th
4 × 100 m relay
44.70
1997
Mediterranean Games
Bari, Italy
1st
200 m
22.62
1st
4 × 100 m
42.63
World Championships
Athens, Greece
4th
100 m
11.05
3rd
4 × 100 m
42.21
1998
European Championships
Budapest, Hungary
1st
100 m
10.73
1st
4 × 100 m
42.59
1999
World Championships
Seville, Spain
6th
100 m
10.97
2nd
4 × 100 m
42.06
2000
Olympic Games
Sydney, Australia
semi-final
100 m
11.42 (11.26)
4th
4 × 100 m
42.42
2003
World Championships
Paris, France
4th
100 m
11.06
1st
4 × 100 m
41.78
2004
Olympic Games
Athens, Greece
semi-final
100 m
11.21 (11.10)
semi-final
200 m
23.05
3rd
4 × 100 m
42.54
2005
World Championships
Helsinki, Finland
3rd
100 m
10.98
3rd
200 m
22.31
4th
4 × 100 m
42.85
2006
World Indoor Championships
Moscow, Russia
4th
60 m
7.13 (7.11)
2008
Olympic Games
Beijing, China
quarter-final
100 m
11.36
2010
European Championships
Barcelona, Spain
8th
100 m
11.37 (11.24)
2nd
4 × 100 m
42.45
2012
European Championships
Helsinki, Finland
heats
100 m
11.55
5th
4 × 100 m
43.44
Note: Results in brackets indicate a superior time achieved in an earlier round.
References
External links
1983 : Silke Gladisch , Marita Koch , Ingrid Auerswald , Marlies Oelsner-Göhr (GDR)
1987 : Alice Brown , Diane Williams , Florence Griffith Joyner , Pam Marshall (USA)
1991 : Dahlia Duhaney , Juliet Cuthbert , Beverly McDonald , Merlene Ottey , Merlene Frazer (JAM)
1993 : Olga Bogoslovskaya , Galina Malchugina , Natalya Pomoshchnikova-Voronova , Irina Privalova , Marina Trandenkova (RUS)
1995 : Celena Mondie-Milner , Carlette Guidry , Chryste Gaines , Gwen Torrence , D'Andre Hill (USA)
1997 : Chryste Gaines , Marion Jones , Inger Miller , Gail Devers (USA)
1999 : Savatheda Fynes , Chandra Sturrup , Pauline Davis-Thompson , Debbie Ferguson , Eldece Clarke-Lewis (BAH)
2001 : Melanie Paschke , Gabi Rockmeier , Birgit Rockmeier , Marion Wagner (GER)
2003 : Patricia Girard-Léno , Muriel Hurtis , Sylviane Félix , Christine Arron (FRA)
2005 : Angela Daigle , Muna Lee , Me'Lisa Barber , Lauryn Williams (USA)
2007 : Lauryn Williams , Allyson Felix , Mikele Barber , Torri Edwards , Carmelita Jeter , Mechelle Lewis (USA)
2009 : Simone Facey , Shelly-Ann Fraser , Aleen Bailey , Kerron Stewart (JAM)
2011 : Bianca Knight , Allyson Felix , Marshevet Myers , Carmelita Jeter , Shalonda Solomon , Alexandria Anderson (USA)
2013 : Carrie Russell , Kerron Stewart , Schillonie Calvert , Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce , Sheri-Ann Brooks (JAM)
2015 : Veronica Campbell Brown , Natasha Morrison , Elaine Thompson , Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce , Sherone Simpson , Kerron Stewart (JAM)
2017 : Aaliyah Brown , Allyson Felix , Morolake Akinosun , Tori Bowie , Ariana Washington (USA)
2019 : Natalliah Whyte , Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce , Jonielle Smith , Shericka Jackson , Natasha Morrison (JAM)
2022 : Melissa Jefferson , Abby Steiner , Jenna Prandini , Twanisha Terry , Aleia Hobbs (USA)
2023 : Tamari Davis , Twanisha Terry , Gabrielle Thomas , Sha'Carri Richardson , Tamara Clark , Melissa Jefferson (USA)
1938 : Germany (Kohl , Krauß , Albus , Kühnel )
1946 : Netherlands (v.d. Kade-Koudijs , Witziers-Timmer , Adema , Blankers-Koen )
1950 : Great Britain (Hay , Desforges , Hall , Foulds )
1954 : Soviet Union (Krepkina , Uliskina , Itkina , Turova )
1958 : Soviet Union (Krepkina , Kepp , Polyakova , Maslovska )
1962 : Poland (Ciepły , Sobotta , Szyroka , Piątkowska )
1966 : Poland (Bednarek , Straszyńska , Kirszenstein , Kłobukowska )
1969 : GDR (Höfer , Meissner , Podeswa , Vogt )
1971 : FRG (Schittenhelm , Helten , Irrgang , Mickler )
1974 : GDR (Maletzki , Stecher , Heinich , Eckert )
1978 : Soviet Union (Anisimova , Maslakova , Kondratyeva , Storozhkova )
1982 : GDR (Walther , Eckert , Rieger , Göhr )
1986 : GDR (Gladisch , Rieger , Brestrich-Auerswald , Göhr )
1990 : GDR (Möller , Krabbe , Behrendt , Günther )
1994 : Germany (Paschke , Knoll , Zipp , Lichtenhagen )
1998 : France (Benth , Bangué , Félix , Arron )
2002 : France (Combe , Hurtis , Félix , Sidibé )
2006 : Russia (Gushchina , Rusakova , Khabarova , Grigoryeva )
2010 : Ukraine (Povh , Pohrebnyak , Ryemyen , Bryzhina )
2012 : Germany (Günther , Cibis , Pinto , Sailer )
2014 : Great Britain (Philip , Nelson , J. Williams , Henry )
2016 : Netherlands (Samuel , Schippers , Van Schagen , Sedney )
2018 : Great Britain (Philip , Lansiquot , B. Williams , Asher-Smith )
2022 : Germany (Mayer , Haase , Lückenkemper , Burghardt )
2024 : Great Britain (Asher-Smith , Henry , Hunt , Neita )
1971: Italy (Maddalena Grassano , Laura Nappi , Ileana Ongar , Cecilia Molinari )
1975: France (Annie Alizé , Nadine Goletto , Catherine Delachan , Nicole Pani )
1979: France (Annie Alizé , Emma Sulter , Vlaudine Mas , Chantal Réga )
1983: France (Rose-Aimée Bacoul , Marie-France Loval , Marie-Christine Cazier , Liliane Gaschet )
1987: France (Nathalie Simon , Marine Cassin , Laurence Bongard , Violetta Kaminska )
1991: France (Magalie Simioneck , Maguy Nestoret , Valérie Jean-Charles , Fabienne Ficher )
1993: France (Patricia Girard , Odiah Sidibé , Maguy Nestoret , Valérie Jean-Charles )
1997: France (Frédérique Bangué , Christine Arron , Patricia Girard , Sylviane Félix )
2001: France (Haïdy Aron , Fabé Dia , Céline Thelamon , Sylvie Mballa Éloundou )
2005: France (Véronique Mang , Lina Jacques-Sébastien , Fabé Dia , Carima Louami )
2009: France (Myriam Soumaré , Ayodelé Ikuesan , Nelly Banco , Émilie Gaydu )
2013: Italy (Micol Cattaneo , Jessica Paoletta , Ilenia Draisci , Audrey Alloh )
2018: France (Orlann Ombissa-Dzangue , Jennifer Galais , Estelle Raffai , Carolle Zahi )
2022: Italy (Irene Siragusa , Gloria Hooper , Aurora Berton , Johanelis Herrera Abreu )