Caterine Ibargüen
Colombian athlete competing in high jump, long jump and triple jump
In this
Spanish name , the first or paternal
surname is
Ibargüen and the second or maternal family name is
Mena .
Caterine Ibargüen
Ibargüen at the 2015 World Championships
Full name Caterine Ibargüen Mena Nationality Colombian Born (1984-02-12 ) 12 February 1984 (age 40) Apartadó , Antioquia , Colombia [ 1] Height 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) Weight 65 kg (143 lb) Country Colombia Sport Athletics Events Coached by Ubaldo Duany Retired 2021 Personal bests High jump : 1.93 (2005 )Long jump : 6.93 NR (2018 )Triple jump : 15.31 NR (2014)Heptathlon : 5742 (2009)
Caterine Ibargüen Mena ODB (born 12 February 1984)[ 2] is a retired Colombian athlete competing in high jump , long jump and triple jump .[ 3] [ 4] Her notable achievements include a gold medal at the 2016 Summer Olympics , silver medal in the 2012 Summer Olympics , two gold medals in the World Championships in Athletics , and two gold medals in the 2011 Pan American Games and 2015 Pan American Games .
Biography
Caterine was born in the Urabá region of Antioquia, where she was raised by her grandmother after her parents separated because of the armed conflict in Colombia .[ 5] Her father left for Venezuela and her mother moved to Turbo, Colombia . Caterine first played volleyball, and Wilder Zapata, her coach, noticed her skill and suggested she play in Medellín , which had the high-profile Atanasio Girardot Sports Complex as a venue for national and international games. There, she began her training in 1996 with the Cuban coach Jorge Luis Alfaro, specializing in the high jump.
Her personal best in the high jump is 1.93 metres, achieved on 22 July 2005 in Cali . This is the current Colombian record. She competed at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens , where she jumped 1.85 m in the qualifying round. She held the South American record in the triple jump with 15.31 m from July 2014 until September 2019.[ 6] That jump remained the best jump since the Olympics in August 2008 until Yulimar Rojas achieved a mark of 15.41 m at the Jaén Paraíso Interior Meeting. On 1 September 2011, she obtained the bronze medal at the IAAF World Championships in Daegu with a 14.84 m performance. Based in Puerto Rico .[ 7] Coached by Ubaldo Duany , former Cuban Long Jumper (8.32 m PB from 1986). On 5 August, she won a silver medal at the London 2012 Olympics in the triple jump competition with a 14.80 m jump on her last attempt. On 15 August 2013, she won IAAF World Championships in Moscow in the triple jump competition with a 14.85 m jump on her second attempt.
Caterine Ibargüen announced retirement in August 2021.[ 8]
Personal bests
Outdoor
200 m: 24.96 s (wind: -1.2 m/s) – San Germán , 4 December 2009
800 m: 2:35.35 min – San Germán , 4 December 2010
100 m hurdles: 14.09 s (wind: +0.0 m/s) – Mayagüez , 19 February 2011
High jump: 1.93 m – Cali , 22 July 2005
Long jump: 6.93 m (wind: +0.8 m/s) – Ostrava , 9 September 2018
Triple jump: 15.31 m (wind: 0.0 m/s) – Monaco , 18 July 2014
Shot put: 13.79 m – Carolina , 20 March 2010
Javelin throw: 37.72 m – San Germán , 4 December 2010
Heptathlon: 5742 pts – San Germán , 5 December 2009
Indoor
High jump: 1.81 m – Moscow , 11 March 2006
International competitions
Representing Colombia
Year
Competition
Venue
Position
Event
Notes
1999
South American Championships
Bogotá , Colombia
3rd
High jump
1.76 m A
World Youth Championships
Bydgoszcz , Poland
15th (q)
High jump
1.65 m
South American Junior Championships
Concepción, Chile
2nd
High jump
1.73 m
2001
South American Junior Championships
Santa Fe, Argentina
1st
High jump
1.77 m
2nd
Long jump
5.87 m
3rd
Triple jump
12.65 m
2nd
4 × 100 m
45.92 s
Pan American Junior Championships
Santa Fe, Argentina
2nd
High jump
1.77 m
6th
Long jump
5.70 m
4th
Triple jump
12.90 m
3rd
4 × 100 m
46.89 s
Bolivarian Games
Ambato, Ecuador
1st
High jump
1.79 m A
2002
World Junior Championships
Kingston , Jamaica
20th (q)
Triple jump
12.69 m (+0.6 m/s)
Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships (U-20)
Bridgetown , Barbados
2nd
High jump
1.79 m
3rd
Triple jump
13.01 m (−1.3 m/s)
Central American and Caribbean Games
San Salvador , El Salvador
3rd
High jump
1.79 m
2nd
Triple jump
13.17 m (−1.4 m/s)
2003
South American Junior Championships
Guayaquil , Ecuador
1st
High jump
1.80 m
1st
Triple jump
13.05 m (+2.0 m/s)
South American Championships
Barquisimeto , Venezuela
4th
High jump
1.79 m
2nd
Long jump
6.04 m (−0.4 m/s)
3rd
Triple jump
13.07 m (−0.1 m/s)
Pan American Junior Championships
Bridgetown , Barbados
4th
High jump
1.81 m
4th
Triple jump
12.64 m (−0.8 m/s)
2004
South American Under-23 Championships
Barquisimeto , Venezuela
1st
High jump
1.91 m
2nd
Long jump
6.05 m (+0.9 m/s)
Ibero-American Championships
Huelva , Spain
3rd
High jump
1.88 m
Olympic Games
Athens , Greece
16th (q)
High jump
1.85 m
2005
South American Championships
Cali , Colombia
1st
High jump
1.93 m
3rd
Long jump
6.30 m (−3.0 m/s)
3rd
Triple jump
13.59 m (+1.3 m/s)
World Championships
Helsinki , Finland
23rd (q)
High jump
1.84 m
Bolivarian Games
Armenia , Colombia
1st
High jump
1.91 m GR A
1st
Long jump
6.54 m (+0.7 m/s) GR A
2nd
Triple jump
13.64 m (+1.9 m/s) A
2006
World Indoor Championships
Moscow , Russia
17th (q)
High jump
1.81 m
Central American and Caribbean Games
Cartagena , Colombia
2nd
High jump
1.88 m
2nd
Long jump
6.36 m (+0.5 m/s)
South American Championships
Tunja , Colombia
1st
High jump
1.90 m
2nd
Long jump
6.51 m A w (+3.8 m/s)
2nd
Triple jump
13.91 m A (+0.9 m/s)
South American Under-23 Championships / South American Games
Buenos Aires , Argentina
2nd
High jump
1.85 m
1st
Long jump
6.32 m (+1.1 m/s)
2nd
Triple jump
13.26 m w (+2.5 m/s)
2007
ALBA Games
Caracas , Venezuela
1st
High jump
1.85 m
Pan American Games
Rio de Janeiro , Brazil
4th
High jump
1.87 m
South American Championships
São Paulo , Brazil
1st
High jump
1.84 m
3rd
Long jump
6.18 m (+0.9 m/s)
2008
Ibero-American Championships
Iquique , Chile
2nd
High jump
1.85 m
Central American and Caribbean Championships
Cali , Colombia
2nd
High jump
1.88 m
6th
Triple jump
13.04 m (−2.0 m/s)
2009
South American Championships
Lima , Peru
1st
High jump
1.88 m A
1st
Triple jump
13.93 m A (+0.5 m/s)
World Championships
Berlin , Germany
28th (q)
High jump
1.85 m
Bolivarian Games
Sucre , Bolivia
1st
High jump
1.80 m A
1st
Long jump
6.32 m A (−0.4 m/s)
2nd
Triple jump
13.96 m A (−0.3 m/s)
2010
Ibero-American Championships
San Fernando , Spain
2nd
Triple jump
14.29 m (+2.0 m/s)
Central American and Caribbean Games
Mayagüez , Puerto Rico
4th
Long jump
6.29 m (−0.5 m/s)
2nd
Triple jump
14.10 m (+0.8 m/s)
2011
South American Championships
Buenos Aires, Argentina
3rd
Long jump
6.45 m (−0.5 m/s)
1st
Triple jump
14.59 m w (+2.2 m/s)
World Championships
Daegu , South Korea
3rd
Triple jump
14.84 m (+0.4 m/s)
Pan American Games
Guadalajara , Mexico
3rd
Long jump
6.63 m (+1.6 m/s) NR
1st
Triple jump
14.92 m (+0.1 m/s)
2012
Olympic Games
London , United Kingdom
2nd
Triple jump
14.80 m (+0.4 m/s)
2013
World Championships
Moscow, Russia
1st
Triple jump
14.85 m (+0.4 m/s)
2014
Continental Cup
Marrakesh , Morocco
1st
Triple jump
14.52 m (−0.5 m/s)
Central American and Caribbean Games
Xalapa , Mexico
1st
Triple jump
14.57 m A (−0.4 m/s)
2015
Pan American Games
Toronto , Canada
1st
Triple jump
15.08 m (w)
World Championships
Beijing , China
1st
Triple jump
14.90 m
2016
Olympic Games
Rio de Janeiro , Brazil
1st
Triple jump
15.17 m
2017
World Championships
London, United Kingdom
2nd
Triple jump
14.89 m
2018
Central American and Caribbean Games
Barranquilla , Colombia
1st
Long jump
6.83 m (w)
1st
Triple jump
14.92 m
Continental Cup
Ostrava , Czech Republic
1st
Long jump
6.93 m NR
1st
Triple jump
14.76 m
2019
Pan American Games
Lima, Peru
5th
Long jump
6.54 m
World Championships
Doha , Qatar
3rd
Triple jump
14.73 m
2021
Olympic Games
Tokyo , Japan
10th
Triple jump
14.25 m
Honours
Colombia :
Grand Cross of the National Order of Merit (12 December 2018)
Awards
2018 IAAF Female athlete of the year award[ 9]
References
^ Tiempo, Casa Editorial El (24 August 2015). "Esta es la hoja de vida de Catherine Ibargüen" . El Tiempo (in Spanish). Retrieved 8 August 2017 .
^ "Athlete Profile" . IAAF Athletics . 8 September 2014. Retrieved 5 March 2015 .
^ Biography – IBARGUEN Catherine , Panam Sports , archived from the original on 25 March 2014, retrieved 8 January 2015
^ Clavelo, Javier; Biscayart, Eduardo (8 September 2014), Focus on Athletes biographies – Caterine IBARGÜEN Mena, Colombia (Long Jump/Triple Jump) , IAAF , retrieved 8 January 2015
^ Alperín, Eduardo (6 August 2012). "La historia de Ibargüen" . ESPN Deportes . Retrieved 5 March 2015 .
^ Mike Rowbottom (18 July 2014). "Ibargüen's terrific triple jump of 15.31m – IAAF Diamond League" . IAAF . Retrieved 18 July 2014 .
^ Gallo, Iván (14 August 2016). "El adiós dorado de Caterine Ibargüen" . Las2orillas . Retrieved 15 August 2016 .
^ Colombia’s Ibarguen brings golden triple jumping career to close at 37 Inside the games
^ "Eliud Kipchoge and Caterine Ibarguen take top honours at IAAF athletge of the year awards" . Reuters . Archived from the original on 6 December 2018. Retrieved 6 December 2018 .
External links