Michelle Jenneke

Australian athlete and model

Michelle "Shelly" Jenneke (/məˈʃɛl ˈɛnəkə/; born on June 23, 1993) is an Australian hurdler and model, who won a silver medal for the 100 meters hurdles at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics. She became well known in 2012 for her dancing before a race.

Michelle Jenneke
Michelle Jenneke after finishing 100-metre hurdles in Barcelona, 2012
Personal information
Full nameMichelle Jenneke
Nickname(s)Shelly
NationalityAustralian
Born (1993-06-23) 23 June 1993 (age 30)
Kenthurst, New South Wales
Height5 ft 7.75 in (1.72 m)
Sport
CountryAustralia Australia
SportAthletics
Event(s)100 metres hurdles
Sprint medley relay
ClubSydney University Athletics Club
TeamAthletics Australia
Achievements and titles
World finals
  • 2012 World Junior Championships:
    100 metres hurdles – 5th place
National finals
  • 2011 Australian Championships:
    100 metres hurdles – 3rd place
Olympic finals
Personal best(s)100 m hurdles 13.39 (−1.4 m/s) (Mannheim 2012)
Medal record
Women's Hurdling
Representing  Australia
Youth Olympic Games
Silver medal – second place2010 Singapore100 metres hurdles
Oceania Youth Championships
Gold medal – first place2010 Sydney 100 m hurdles
Gold medal – first place2010 Sydney 4x100 m relay
Bronze medal – third place2010 Sydney 100 m

Background

Jenneke was born in Kenthurst, New South Wales, Australia.[1] She went to The Hills Grammar School. She likes Australian rules football, soccer and handball.[2]

She is learning engineering at Sydney University.[3]

Athletics

Jenneke has worked with coach Mick Zisti since she was 10 years old at the Cherrybrook Athletics Club.[1][4] She ran at the 2008 Pacific School Games in the 90 and 200 meters hurdles.[4][5]

In March 2010, Jenneke won 1st place in the 100 m hurdles and broke the Australian record in the women's sprint medley relay at the 2010 Australian Junior Championships.[6] She ran in the 2011 Pirtek Athletic Allstars event.[7]Template:Citation broken In July 2010, Jenneke was in Australia's team at the 2010 Singapore Youth Olympic Games, running the 100 meter hurdles and the women's medley relay. In the hurdles, she came in second place with a time of 13.56 seconds, which the fastest she had ever run, and the medley relay team finished in fourth place.[8][9][10][11][12][13] Her medal was the first Australia won at the Games in her sport.[14]

In 2011, she ran at the Cooks Classic in New Zealand.[15] At the 2011 Australian Junior Championships, she won first place in hurdles for runners under 20 years old.[15] In April 2011 she ran at the 89th Australian Athletics Championships and came in third place in the 100 meter hurdles behind the world champion Sally Pearson.[16]

On July 15, 2012, Jenneke came in fifth place in the 2012 IAAF World Junior Championships 100 meter hurdles.[17] After the race, a video of her running was put on a video website, and she became well known around the world.[18][19]

Jenneke was on Australia's 2014 Commonwealth Games team.[20]

In those 2014 Commonwealth Games she set a new personal best time in a race, running it in 13.33 seconds and was 5th place in the final race with a time of 13.36 seconds. Jenneke was the youngest runner in the final race.

Career highlights

  • 1st place (100m hurdles) – 2010 Australian Junior Championships
  • 1st place (4 × 100 m relay) – 2010 Australian Junior Championships (Australian record)
  • 2nd place (100m hurdles) – 2010 Summer Youth Olympics, Singapore
  • 4th place ("Swedish medley" relay) – 2010 Summer Youth Olympics, Singapore
  • 3rd place (100m hurdles) – 2011 Australian Championships
  • 5th place (100m hurdles) – 2012 World Junior Championships in Athletics, Barcelona, Spain
  • 5th place (100m hurdles) – 2014 Commonwealth Games, Glasgow, Scotland 13.36 [21]

Media coverage

In July 2012 videos of Jenneke dancing before a race at the 2012 World Junior Championships in Athletics in Barcelona went viral on YouTube.[22] One clip received 19 million views by the following week and was featured on the American late night talk show, The Tonight Show.[23]

Jenneke was in a short funny video made by the website The Chive called Forever Alone Meets Michelle Jenneke, being herself talking about her viral race video.[24] The Forever Alone video had received over ten million views on YouTube by 2014.[25]

In January 2013 Jenneke was tenth on AskMen.com's 99 Most Desirable Women 2013.[26] She was one of the athletes featured in the 2013 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue.[27][28]

In 2014 Jenneke was featured in a mobile phone application on stretching techniques called Stretch with Michelle Jenneke.[29][30]

Athletic achievements

YearCompetitionVenuePositionEventNotes
Representing  Australia
2010Oceania Youth ChampionshipsSydney3rd100 m12.15 s (wind: +0.5 m/s)
Oceania Youth ChampionshipsSydney1st100 m hurdles14.12 s (wind: -1.4 m/s)
Oceania Youth ChampionshipsSydney1st4 × 100 m relay45.75 s

References

Other websites