British high jumper (born 1966)
Dalton Grant
Born (1966-04-08 ) 8 April 1966 (age 58) Hackney, Greater London, England Sport Athletics Club Haringey AC, London
Dalton Grant (born 8 April 1966) is a former high jumper .
Athletics career
Grant won a total number of four national titles for Great Britain (AAA Championships ) in the men's high jump event. His personal best jump is 2.36 metres, achieved at the 1991 World Championships in Tokyo. He has a personal indoor best of 2.37 metres.[ 1]
Grant appeared at five consecutive Commonwealth Games . He represented England in the high jump, at the 1986 Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh, Scotland.[ 2] [ 3] Four years later he won a silver medal for England , at the 1990 Commonwealth Games in Auckland , New Zealand[ 4] [ 5] which was followed by a third Games appearance for England , at the 1994 Commonwealth Games in Victoria , British Columbia, Canada.[ 6] [ 7] He finally won a gold medal at the 1998 Games and competed in the high jump for the fifth successive Games in 2002.[ 8]
Biography
Grant was born in Hackney to parents from Jamaica and lived in Brooke Road, Upper Clapton . He went to Hackney Downs School where he started to high jump.[ 9] He also represented Hackney in the London Youth Games in athletics.[ 10]
He was later inducted into the London Youth Games Hall of Fame in 2011.
Personal life
He was a board director of the London 2012 Olympic bid team and he was also a captain of the Great Britain & NI team. Grant was appointed president of the South of England Athletics Association for 2010–2011. Dalton has set up the Dalton Grant Academy in Trinidad and Tobago. He is also a patron of Mossbourne Academy .
Achievements
Year
Competition
Venue
Position
Event
Notes
Representing Great Britain and England
1985
European Junior Championships
Cottbus , East Germany
6th
High jump
2.18 m
1986
Commonwealth Games
Edinburgh, United Kingdom
7th
High jump
2.10 m
1987
European Indoor Championships
Liévin , France
7th
High jump
2.27 m
World Indoor Championships
Indianapolis, United States
8th
High jump
2.28 m
1988
European Indoor Championships
Budapest, Hungary
11th
High jump
2.24 m
Olympic Games
Seoul, South Korea
7th
High jump
2.31 m
1989
European Indoor Championships
The Hague, Netherlands
2nd
High jump
2.33 m
World Indoor Championships
Budapest, Hungary
4th
High jump
2.35 m
World Cup
Barcelona , Spain
2nd
High jump
2.31 m
1990
Commonwealth Games
Auckland , New Zealand
2nd
High jump
2.34 m
European Indoor Championships
Glasgow, United Kingdom
7th
High jump
2.24 m
European Championships
Split, Yugoslavia
4th
High jump
2.31 m
1991
World Championships
Tokyo, Japan
4th
High jump
2.36 m
1992
Olympic Games
Barcelona , Spain
29th (q)
High jump
2.15 m
1993
World Indoor Championships
Toronto , Canada
4th
High jump
2.34 m
World Championships
Stuttgart , Germany
14th (q)
High jump
2.25 m
1994
European Indoor Championships
Paris, France
1st
High jump
2.37 m
European Championships
Helsinki, Finland
9th
High jump
2.25 m
Commonwealth Games
Victoria , Canada
5th
High jump
2.28 m
1995
World Indoor Championships
Barcelona , Spain
8th
High jump
2.28 m
World Championships
Gothenburg, Sweden
14th (q)
High jump
2.27 m
1996
European Indoor Championships
Stockholm, Sweden
19th (q)
High jump
2.15 m
Olympic Games
Atlanta, United States
19th (q)
High jump
2.26 m
1997
World Indoor Championships
Paris, France
10th
High jump
2.25 m
World Championships
Athens, Greece
4th
High jump
2.32 m
1998
European Championships
Budapest, Hungary
2nd
High jump
2.34 m
Commonwealth Games
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
1st
High jump
2.31 m
2002
Commonwealth Games
Manchester, United Kingdom
6th
High jump
2.15 m
European Championships
Munich , Germany
–
High jump
NM
2003
World Indoor Championships
Birmingham, United Kingdom
12th (q)
High jump
2.20 m
References
External links
1880–1914
1880: John Parsons
1881: John Parsons
1882: R.F. Houghton
1883: John Parsons
1884: Tom Ray
1885: Tom Ray
1886: George Rowdon
1887: George Rowdon
1888: George Rowdon
1889: Thomas Jennings
1890: Cecil Haward
1891: Thomas Jennings
1892: Arthur Watkinson
1893: Thomas Jennings
1894: Reginald Williams
1895: Reginald Williams
1896: Reginald Williams
1897: Claude Leggatt
1898: Robert Perry & Henry Adair
1899: Claude Leggatt
1900: Walter Henderson
1901: NBA
1902: NBA
1903: NBA
1904: John Milne & R.G. Murray
1905: Edward Leader
1906: Oswald Groenings
1907: Frederick Birkett
1908: Oswald Groenings & Walter Henderson
1909: John Banks
1910: Benjamin Howard Baker
1911: Benjamin Howard Baker
1912: Benjamin Howard Baker
1913: Benjamin Howard Baker
1914: Benjamin Howard Baker
1919–39 1946–59 1960–2006