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Donovan Bailey








Donovan Bailey (born December 16 , 1967 ) is a Canadian former Athlete .

Born in Manchester , Jamaica , Bailey emigrated from Jamaica to Canada at age 13, and played Basketball before his graduation at Queen Elizabeth Park High School in Oakville, Ontario . He began competing as a 100 m sprinter part-time in 1991, but he did not take up the sport seriously until 1994. At that time, he was also a successful stockbroker.

The following year saw his international breakthrough. At the World Championships in Gothenburg , Sweden , Bailey won both the 100 metre sprint and the 4 x 100 metre relay titles.

He repeated that double win at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics , setting a world record of 9.84s +0.7 m/s wind in the 100 m (the previous record was set in July 1994 by American Leroy Burrell at 9.85 seconds). Many Canadians felt his victory restored the image of Canadian athletes, which had been tarnished by Ben Johnson 's previous disqualified win at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul . Bailey was the 2nd person to hold all the major titles in the 100 m concurrently (World Champion, Olympic Champion & World Record Holder); Carl Lewis was the first.

Bailey won a third world title in 1997 with the Canadian relay team, while finishing second in the 100 m behind Maurice Greene .

See Also: Bailey-Johnson 150-metre race


In June of 1997, he raced against Michael Johnson in a 150 m race at Toronto 's SkyDome in a bid to truly determine who was the world's fastest man. Earlier that year, Johnson began performing television promotions in which he billed himself as "the world's fastest man" as a result of his 200 meters world record, despite the fact that the 100 metres world record holders are typically given that unofficial title. Bailey initially refused to take part, stated that "the world's fastest man was decided in Atlanta". Bailey won $2 million for winning that race, in which Johnson pulled out at the 100 m mark with what he alleged was an injured quadriceps muscle. Fans at the event (which nearly bankrupted the promoter) booed Johnson for what appeared dropping out while Bailey was ahead of him past the 100 meter mark.

After that season, Bailey struggled with injuries and, in the 2000 Summer Olympics , Pneumonia , and never reached his previous level of performance. He retired from the sport in 2001, having been a five-time World and Olympic champion.

Bailey's time of 9.84 in Atlanta was the 100m world record from 1996 until 1999, when it was broken by Greene. The time also stood as the Commonwealth record from 1996 until 2005, when it was broken by Asafa Powell , and is the current Canadian record (shared with Bruny Surin since 1999).

Donovan Bailey set the indoor world record in the 50 metres (5.56A, in Reno, Nevada , in 1996); Maurice Greene matched that performance in 1999, but his run was never ratified as a world record.

He now has his own company called DBX Sport Management, which helps amateur athletes find a way to promote themselves.


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  NAME Bailey, Donovan
  SHORT DESCRIPTION Canadian athlete, Olympic medalist
  DATE OF BIRTH December 16, 1967
  PLACE OF BIRTH Manchester, Jamaica