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Jen Toomey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jennifer "Jen" Toomey(born December 19, 1971) is an American middle-distance runner who won three US national titles, broke an American record, and was a world ranked runner from 2001 to 2006.

Career

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Toomey, now Boyd, grew up inConnecticut,graduated fromTufts Universitywith a degree inBiology,and was later based inSalem.[1]In high school, she had quit her track team hating the sport. Almost ten years later, she took up running seriously in 1999 after training for theBoston Marathonand by 2001 had a third-place finish in the USA Outdoor Track & Field Championships.[1]

In February 2004 she broke the US indoor record for 1,000m inBirmingham,England, making her the 4th fastest woman all-time in this event.[2] She won her first US indoor titles in 2004, winning the 800m final in 2:00.02 and the 1500m final in 4:09.82, the first female athlete to accomplish this double.[1][3][4]She won the 1500m again in 2005.[5][6]

With an outdoor 800m personal best of 1:59.75 outdoors and 1:59:64 indoors, gained in 2003 and 2004 respectively, Toomey was regarded as one of the best 800-meter runners in the world in the mid-2000s.[7][8]

She finished second in the 1500m at the US Olympic trials but was prevented from competing in the2004 Athens Olympicsby a knee injury and anadductorstrain.[8]She subsequently relocated toFlagstaff, Arizona,where she worked with coachJack Daniels.[5]She returned to competition, clocking personal bests at 1500m in 2005 (indoors) and a mile in 2006 (outdoors), but had to again take a break due to injuries includingstress fracturesin both feet, and a tornmeniscus.[5][7]She returned to Salem and her old coach Tom McDermott, and made a competitive comeback in 2008.[5]

References

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  1. ^abc"On the Fast Track: The Dot-Com Bust Sent Salem's Jennifer Toomey to a Track to See Just How Fast She Could Run Two Loops. The Answer: Very. Are the Olympics Next?",The Boston Globe,June 13, 2004. Retrieved January 26, 2013
  2. ^Shipley, Amy (2004) "Toomey: All in Good Time; American Record Holder Is Hitting Her Stride at 32",The Washington Post,February 28, 2004. Retrieved January 26, 2013
  3. ^Golen, Jimmy (2004) "Jen Toomey Takes Double at U.S. Indoors",AP Online, March 1, 2004.
  4. ^Thompson, Rich (2004) "Toomey doubles winnings in 1,500.",Boston Herald,March 1, 2004.}
  5. ^abcdGolen, Jimmy (2008) "Toomey hoping to propel comeback at Boston Indoor meet",USA Today,January 24, 2008. Retrieved January 26, 2013
  6. ^Marrapese-Burrell, Nancy (2005) "Toomey feeling good about win in 1,500",The Boston Globe,February 27, 2005. Retrieved January 26, 2013
  7. ^ab"Athlete Profile: Jennifer Toomey",iaaf.org. Retrieved January 26, 2013
  8. ^abMatson, Barbara (2008) "Home run was timely",The Boston Globe,January 26, 2008