Benita Willis Explained

Benita Willis
Birth Name:Benita Jaye Willis
Birth Date:6 May 1979
Birth Place:Mackay, Queensland, Australia
Sport:Athletics
Event:Marathon

Benita Jaye Willis (born on 6 May 1979 in Mackay, Queensland) is an Australian long-distance runner, who is a three-time national champion in the women's 5,000 metres. Her foremost achievement is a gold medal in the long race at the 2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships. She has also won team medals at that competition on two occasions. She has competed at the Summer Olympics four times (2000, 2004, 2008, 2012) and has twice represented Australia at the Commonwealth Games (2002, 2006).

At the 2003 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships she won the bronze medal with a time of 1:09:26 hours. In 2004, she won the 8K at the 2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships and also the women's half marathon title at the Great North Run. She was 24th in the 10,000 metres at the 2004 Olympic Games. At the 2006 IAAF World Cross Country Championships she won her second career medal at the event by coming fourth in the short race and helping the Australian women to the team bronze medal. She set a time of 2:22:36 at the 2006 Chicago Marathon, a new Australian national record and an Oceania area record.[1] She won the Berlin Half Marathon in 2007 in a personal best time of 1:08.28 hours. Her third international cross country medal came at the 2008 IAAF World Cross Country Championships as she finished eleventh in the long race to lead Australia to third on the team podium.

She finished third at the 2010 Great Ireland Run, recording a time of 34:28.[2] In spite of a break of over three years without competing over the distance, she was the runner-up at the 2012 Houston Marathon with a time 2:28:24 hours (within the Olympic qualifying standard).[3]

Willis was a training partner of Australian distance star Craig Mottram.

Achievements

Representing
1998World Junior ChampionshipsAnnecy, France7th1500m4:16.75
2000Olympic GamesSydney, Australia6th (heats)5000 m15:21:37 min
2001World Indoor ChampionshipsLisbon, Portugal6th3000 m8:42.75 min
World ChampionshipsEdmonton, Canada12th5000 m15:36.75 min
Goodwill GamesBrisbane, Australia4th5000 m15:22.31 min
2002Commonwealth GamesManchester, United Kingdom7th (heats)1500 m4:24.43 min
6th5000 m15:26.55 min
IAAF World CupMadrid, Spain4th5000 m15:20.83 min
2003World Indoor ChampionshipsBirmingham, England7th3000 m8:51.62 min
World ChampionshipsParis, France8th10,000 m30:37.68 min
World Half Marathon ChampionshipsVilamoura, Portugal3rdHalf marathon1:09:26
2004World Cross Country ChampionshipsBrussels, Belgiumbgcolor=gold1stLong race (8 km)27:17
Olympic GamesAthens, Greece24th10,000 m32:32.01 min
2005World ChampionshipsHelsinki, Finland19th10,000 m31:55.15 min
2006World Cross Country ChampionshipsFukuoka, Japan4thShort race (4 km)12:55
3rdShort team race69 pts
Commonwealth GamesMelbourne, Australia4th10,000 m31:58.08 min
2007World ChampionshipsOsaka, Japan17th10,000 m32:55.94 min
2008World Cross Country ChampionshipsEdinburgh, Scotland11thLong race (7.905 km)25:56
3rdLong team race84 pts
Olympic GamesBeijing, PR China21stMarathon2:32:06
2012Olympic GamesLondon, England100thMarathon2:49:38

Circuit wins

Cross country

2002, 2003, 2004

2005

2005

2005

Road

2004

2004

2004 (First Australian to win)

2006, 2007, 2008

2007

2007

2008

Recognition

In 2018, inducted into Australia Hall of Fame.[4] Inaugural inductee to University of Canberra Sport Walk of Fame in 2022.[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.iaaf.org/statistics/recbycat/location=O/recordtype=AR/event=0/age=N/area=OCE/sex=W/records.html iaaf.org - Area Records - Outdoor - Oceania - Women
  2. http://www.iaaf.org/LRR10/news/newsid=56499.html Fagan and Murray nab 10Km victories in Dublin
  3. http://www.iaaf.org/news/newsid=63357.html Jufar sizzles 2:06:51 as records tumble at Houston Marathon
  4. Web site: This year's Hall of Fame inductee is @BenitaWillis. Athletiucs Australia Twitter. 18 February 2018.
  5. Web site: 18 November 2022 . Walk of Fame Members . 18 November 2022 . University of Canberra.