Paula Dunn Explained

Paula Dunn
Nationality:English
Birth Date:3 December 1964
Birth Place:Bradford, West Yorkshire
Sport:Athletics

Paula Dunn, (formerly Thomas, born 3 December 1964) is an English former sprinter who competed in the 100 metres, 200 metres and 4 x 100 metres relay. She represented Great Britain in all three events at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul. She is a five-time Commonwealth Games medallist, including winning silver (1986) and bronze (1994) in the 100 metres. During the 1990s, she competed as Paula Thomas (her then married name). Her personal bests of 11.15 secs in the 100 metres and 22.69 secs in the 200 metres, were the fastest times run by a British female sprinter during the 1990s.[1]

Career

Born Paula Dunn in Bradford, West Yorkshire, England, she was a member of the Trafford Athletics Club (formerly Stretford). She finished sixth in the 100 metres at the 1985 AAA Championships, before making rapid progress in 1986, improving her 100 m PB from 11.67 to 11.25 secs (she also ran a wind-assisted 11.14), winning both the AAAs and UK National 100 metres titles.[2] At that year's Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh, she won a silver medal in the 100 metres, just one one-hundredth of a second behind the winner Heather Oakes but ahead of the Canadian Olympic finalists Angella Issajenko and Angela Bailey. She then teamed up with Oakes, Kathy Cook and Joan Baptiste to win gold in the 4x100 metres relay. Later that year she placed seventh in the 100 metres final at the European Championships in Stuttgart.

In 1987, Dunn competed at the World Championships in Rome, reaching the semi-finals in the 100 metres. At the 1988 Seoul Olympics, she reached the semi-finals of the 200 metres, and also competed in the 100 metres and 4x100 metres relay. She placed fourth in the 60 metres final at the 1989 European Indoor Championships, before going on to finish second at both 100 & 200 metres at the 1989 European Cup in Gateshead, finishing behind the East Germans Katrin Krabbe and Silke Moller respectively. Also in 1989, she won her fourth consecutive AAAs 100 metres title.[3] Between August 1986 and January 1990, Dunn was unbeaten at 100 metres by another British woman.

In January 1990, she won relay silver at the Commonwealth Games in Auckland, with Stephanie Douglas, Jennifer Stoute and Simmone Jacobs. In the summer, competing under her then married name of Paula Thomas (she would be known by this name for the remainder of her athletic career before reverting to Dunn) she won a relay bronze medal at the European Championships in Split, along with Douglas Bev Kinch and Jacobs. She competed at the 1991 and 1993 World Championships. In 1992, she had missed the entire year due to pregnancy.

Dunn reached her peak in 1994, achieving her lifetime bests at that years Commonwealth Games in Victoria. In the 100 metres she won a bronze medal in 11.23 secs, having run her pb of 11.15 secs in the semi-finals. In the 200 metres, she narrowly missed a medal running another lifetime best of 22.69 secs. These times would remain the best sprint times of the decade by a British woman. She added another bronze in the sprint relay. In 1995, she competed at her fourth World Championships in Gothenburg, reaching the semi-finals in the 200 metres. She earned selection for the 1996 Olympic Games, but was forced to withdraw due to illness.[4] As of 2019, Dunn ranks 10th on the UK all-time list at 100 metres and 12th at 200 metres.

Later career

Dunn began working for UK Athletics in 2001 and was appointed Paralympic performance manager in 2009. After London 2012, she was promoted to the position of Paralympic head coach, replacing Peter Eriksson. She is the first female head coach appointed by UK Athletics.[5] [6]

National titles

Honours and awards

Dunn was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2019 New Year Honours for services to Athletics.[7]

International competitions

Representing /
1986Commonwealth GamesEdinburgh, United Kingdom2nd100 m11.21
1st4 × 100 m43.39
European ChampionshipsStuttgart, West Germany7th100 m11.25 (wind: +0.8 m/s)
5th4 × 100 m43.44
1987European Indoor ChampionshipsLievin, France6th60 m7.28
World ChampionshipsRome, Italy16th (sf)100 m11.59
10th (h)4 × 100 m44.21
1988Olympic GamesSeoul, South Korea22nd (qf)100 m11.37
14th (sf)200 m23.14
9th (sf)4 × 100 m43.50
1989European Indoor ChampionshipsThe Hague, Netherlands4th60 m7.24
European CupGateshead, United Kingdom2nd100 m11.24
2nd200 m23.45
4th4 × 100 m
1990Commonwealth GamesAuckland, New Zealand8th100 m11.55
5th200 m23.33
2nd4 × 100 m44.15
European Indoor ChampionshipsGlasgow, United Kingdom7th (sf)60 m7.30
European ChampionshipsSplit, Yugoslavia10th (sf)100 m11.57 (wind: 0.0 m/s)
3rd4 × 100 m43.32
1991World ChampionshipsTokyo, Japan19th (qf)100 m11.51
heats4 × 100 m43.43
1993World ChampionshipsStuttgart, Germany8th4 × 100 m43.86
1994European CupBirmingham, United Kingdom2nd4 × 100 m43.46
European ChampionshipsHelsinki, Finland10th (sf)100 m11.58 (wind: +0.6 m/s)
11th (sf)200 m23.41 (wind: +1.4 m/s)
5th4 × 100 m43.63
Commonwealth GamesVictoria, Canada3rd100 m11.23
4th200 m22.69
3rd4 × 100 m43.46
World CupLondon, United Kingdom7th100 m11.67
6th200 m23.22
8th4 × 100 m44.45
1995World ChampionshipsGothenburg, Sweden15th (qf)100 m11.33
15th (sf)200 m23.03
9th (h)4 × 100 m43.90
(#) indicates overall position in qualifying heats (h) quarterfinals (qf) or semifinals (sf)

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.gbrathletics.com/uk/wa99/html{{dead link|date=March 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  2. Web site: UK Championships.
  3. Web site: AAA Championships (Women).
  4. [The Independent]
  5. [BBC Sport]
  6. [BBC Sport]
  7. Web site: ParalympicsGB Dunn, matthews and warner named in new year's honours list. ParalympicsGB. en. 2019-01-02.