Scottish swimmer (born 1997)
Full name Kathleen Mary Dawson Born (1997-10-03 ) 3 October 1997 (age 27) Kirkcaldy , Fife, Scotland[ 1] Height 173 cm (5 ft 8 in) Weight 64 kg (141 lb) Sport Swimming Strokes Backstroke Club Warrington Warriors College team University of Stirling Coach Bradley Hay, Steven Tigg
Kathleen Mary Dawson MBE (born 3 October 1997) is a Scottish backstroke swimmer . She won gold at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics in mixed 4 × 100 metre medley relay in a world record time. She is also the European champion at the 2020 Budapest Championships and holder of the European record in 100 m backstroke (58.08).
Career
Dawson has represented Scotland at the Commonwealth Games since 2014. She represented Great Britain at the 2016 European Aquatics Championships , and won a bronze medal in 100 metre backstroke .[ 2] She also won a gold in the 4 × 100 metre medley relay .[ 3]
In May 2021, at the European championships held in Budapest , Dawson won gold in the 100 metres backstroke . As a result of a technical error, she had to swim twice in the final, but won on both occasions.[ 4] She also won gold in 4x100m medley and mixed medley relay , and silver in 50 m backstroke at the same Championships.[ 5]
Dawson was named a member of the British team to go to the postponed 2020 Olympics in April 2021. This would be her first Olympics where she would join more experienced Olympians like Aimee Willmott and Molly Renshaw .[ 6]
At the Tokyo Olympics, Dawson raced in the backstroke lead-off leg of the final of the mixed 4 × 100 metre medley relay , winning gold and setting a world record time of 3 minutes 37.58 seconds together with Adam Peaty , James Guy and Anna Hopkin .[ 7]
Dawson was announced as an Observatory for Sport in Scotland ambassador, where she helps spotlight the benefits of community sport for all ages and abilities, and she finished 2021 being voted 'Sportswoman of the Year' at the Scottish Women in Sport Awards, held in Glasgow in November, where she pipped fellow nominees Katie Archibald and Laura Muir to the coveted title.
Dawson was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2022 New Year Honours for services to swimming and women in sport.[ 8] [ 9]
After winning the 100 metres backstroke at the 2024 Aquatics GB Swimming Championships , Dawson sealed her place at the 2024 Summer Olympics .[ 10]
References
External links
2020 : Kathleen Dawson , Adam Peaty , James Guy , Anna Hopkin , Freya Anderson (GBR )
2024 : Ryan Murphy , Nic Fink , Gretchen Walsh , Torri Huske , Regan Smith , Charlie Swanson , Caeleb Dressel , Abbey Weitzeil (USA )
1958: Netherlands (de Nijs , den Haan , Voorbij , Gastelaars )
1962: East Germany (Schmidt , Göbel , Noack , Pechstein )
1966: Netherlands (Sikkens , G. Kok , A. Kok , Beumer )
1970: East Germany (Hofmeister , Schuchardt , Lindner , Wetzko )
1974: East Germany (Richter , Vogel , Kother , Ender )
1977: East Germany (Richter , Nitschke , Pollack , Krause )
1981: East Germany (Kleber , Geweniger , Geissler , Metschuck )
1983: East Germany (Kleber , Geweniger , Geissler , Meineke )
1985: East Germany (Weigang , Gerasch , Gressler , Friedrich )
1987: East Germany (Otto , Hörner , Weigang , Stellmach )
1989: East Germany (Otto , Börnike , Jacob , Meissner )
1991: Soviet Union (Krupskaya , Roudkovskaya , Kononenko , Yermakova )
1993: Germany (Völker , Gerasch , Ustrowski , van Almsick )
1995: Germany (Rund , Dörries , Voitowitch , van Almsick )
1997: Germany (Buschschulte , Gerasch , Meissner , Völker )
1999: Sweden (Alshammar , Östling , Sjöberg , Svahnström )
2000: Sweden (Alshammar , Igelström , Sjöberg , Jöhncke )
2002: Germany (Buschschulte , Weiler , van Almsick , Völker )
2004: France (Manaudou , Thomassin , Mongel , Metella )
2006: Great Britain (Marshall , Balfour , Dunning , Halsall )
2008: Great Britain (Simmonds , Haywood , Lowe , Halsall )
2010: Great Britain (Spofforth , Haywood , Halsall , Smith )
2012: Germany (Mensing , Poewe , Wenk , Steffen )
2014: Denmark (Nielsen , Pedersen , Ottesen , Blume )
2016: Great Britain (Dawson , Tutton , O'Connor , Halsall )
2018: Russia (Fesikova , Yefimova , Chimrova , Kameneva )
2020: Great Britain (Dawson , Renshaw , Stephens , Hopkin )
2022: Sweden (Rosvall , S. Hansson , L. Hansson , Sjöström )
2024: Poland (Piskorska , Sztandera , Peda , Fiedkiewicz )