Events: 200m
Height: 5-6
Weight: 125
PRs: 100m – 11.05
(2005); 200m – 22.11
(2003); 400m – 51.12
(2005)
Born: November 18, 1985
in Los Angeles, Calif.
Current Residence: Los Angeles,
Calif.
High School: Los Angeles
Baptist HS (Calif.) ‘03
Coach: Bob Kersee
Agent: Renaldo Nehemiah
Club: adidas
Career Highlights: 2005
World Outdoor 200m champion;
Two-time USA Outdoor 200m
champion (’04 &
’05); 2004 Olympic
silver medalist; World Junior
record holder; 2004 Olympic
Trials & USA junior
champion; 2004 USA Junior
100m runner-up; 2003 USA
Indoor champion; 2003 Pan
American Games bronze medalist;
Five-time California state
prep champion (three-time
100m, two-time 200m); 2001
World Youth 100m gold medalist
2005 was a phenomenal year
for Felix, who was undefeated
in the 200, won the world
title, set personal bests
at 100 and 400 meters, and
earned the Jesse Owens Award
as the country’s top
female athlete. She won
her second straight national
title in the 2005 Visa 200
meters at the USA Outdoor
Championships (22.13WL),
then came from behind to
win the world title in Helsinki
in 22.16. On the year, Felix
owned the three fastest
times in the world in 2005…
From 2003 to 2004, Felix
went from being a national-caliber
junior athlete to a world
junior record-breaker, World
Championships competitor,
and Olympic 200m silver
medalist…as an 18-year-old,
she won her first Olympic
medal in the women’s
200m in Athens and secured
the world junior record
that she had waited a year
to officially break, clocking
22.18…the performance
gave Felix, the youngest
person on the U.S. team,
the world junior record
by .01 seconds. She beat
the existing record of 22.19,
set in 1980 by the Soviet
Union’s Natalya Bochina.
Ironically, her time of
22.18 was not a personal
best for Felix…On
May 3, 2003, she ran 22.11
in Mexico City, but because
meet organizers did not
arrange in advance for drug
testing at the meet, it
could not be officially
ratified by the IAAF…Felix
won the 2004 Olympic Trials
200m (22.28) a time that
was faster than every winning
time at the Olympic Games
through 1976, and it bests
the 1996 gold medal-winning
time of France’s Marie
Jose Perec by .01 seconds…at
the 2003 USA Indoor Championships,
she tied the U.S. high school
record in the 200 with her
time of 23.22 in the semifinals,
then broke the record in
the finals with her win
in 23.14 seconds…outdoors
in 2003, her 22.51 clocking
at the Mt. SAC Relays on
April 19 broke Marion Jones’
previous USA junior and
high school record of 22.58,
set in 1992…ran a
wind-aided 11.12 100m on
May 30 in Cerritos, Calif.,
at the California masters
meet…her time of 22.52
in winning the California
state title broke Marion
Jones’ high school
federation record for the
fastest time ever run in
a high school-only competition…Felix
won her first California
high school championship
as a sophomore in 2001,
when she won the 100…as
a junior in 2002, she won
the 100 and 200, both with
U.S.-leading times among
junior (19-and-under) athletes…her
father Paul, is an ordained
minister who teaches New
Testament Greek at the Master’s
Seminary in Sun Valley,
Calif…her mother,
Marlean, is an elementary
school teacher…high
school teammates call her
“chicken legs”
due to her long, spindly
legs…didn’t
start running track until
her freshman year of high
school…USA Today reported
that she has leg-pressed
700 pounds on a machine
and dead-lifted 245…Felix
was a prep media sensation,
having had front-page articles
in Sports Illustrated and
USA Today, among other publications…an
extensive profile of Felix
was featured by CNN on June
10, 2003…attends the
University of Southern California,
where her older brother,
Wes was the 2002 USA junior
champion at 200 meters (21.57)…after
the 2003 season, Felix switched
coaches, moving from Pat
Connolly to Bobby Kersee.
Her 2005 performances helped
make Kersee the 2005 Nike
Coach of the Year ...web
site is http://www.allysonfelixusa.com/
2005: 200m World Outdoor
Champion (22.16)…1st
in 200m at USA Outdoor Champs
(22.13)…1st in 200m
at adidas Track Classic
(22.14)…3rd in 100m
at Rome (11.14)…3rd
in 100m at Stockholm (11.29)…7th
in 100m at Zurich (11.18)…1st
in 100m at Yokohama (11.05PR)…1st
in 200m at Doha (22.78)…1st
in 200m at Monterrey (22.31)…1st
in 200m at World Athletics
Final (22.27)…1st
at Norwich Union (51.12PR)
… ranked #1 in the
world (#1 U.S.) in 200m
and #9 in the world (#4
U.S.) in 100m by T&FN…bests
of 11.05 in 100m and 22.13
in 200m.
2004: Olympic 200m silver
medalist (22.18 WJ)…Olympic
Trials 200m champion (22.28)...USA
Junior 200m champion (22.73)…2nd
in 100m at Modesto (11.19)…2nd
in 100m at Mt. Sac (11.14w)…3rd
in 200m at Payton Jordan
US Open (22.71)…3rd
at adidas Oregon Track Classic
(23.12)…2nd in 400m
in Mexico City (51.83)…1st
Linz 100m in PR 11.16…7th
in 60m at USA Indoors (7.33)…2nd
in 400m at adidas Boston
Indoor Games (52.28)…5th
in 60m at Verizon Millrose
Games (7.36)…ranked
#2 in the world (#1 U.S.)
by T&FN…best of
22.18.
2003: USA Indoors 200m champion
(23.14 national HS record)…Pan
American Games 200m Bronze
medalist (22.93)...3rd at
USA Outdoors 200m (22.59)…3rd
in Paris on July 4 200m
(22.66)…6th in heat
3 at World Outdoor Championships
200m (23.33)…1st in
Mexico City 200m (22.11
U.S. junior record, faster
than existing WJR)…1st
at Mt. SAC Relays in 200m
(22.51 U.S. junior record)
and 100m HS (11.24w)…ran
23.22 in semis at USA Indoors
to tie previous HS record…3rd
in semifinal heat at World
Indoors (23.29)…1st
at Pasadena Games in 400m
(52.26)…won the California
state high school championships
100m (11.29), 200m (22.52)…
ranked #8 in the world (#3
U.S.) at 200m by T&FN…bests
of 11.29, 22.11, 52.26.
2002: Runner-up at USA junior
champs (23.31)…5th
at World Juniors (23.48)…won
California HS titles at
100m (11.40) and 200m (22.83,
fastest by a U.S. junior
in 2002)…bests of
11.40 and 22.83.
2001: Won 100m at the 2001
World Youth Athletics (11.57)…ran
the 200 leg on Team USA’s
winning Sprint Medley Relay
(2:03.82)…Won California
HS title at 100m (11.61),
second in 200 (23.27)…won
the 200m at Youth Athletics
nationals (23.82)…bests
of 11.51 and 23.31.
2000: 7th at California
HS champs (24.35).