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Maryse Éwanjé-Épée (born September 4, 1964, in Poitiers, France) is a retired high jumper from France.
Personal information | |
---|---|
Nationality | French |
Born | Poitiers, France | September 4, 1964
Height | 1.76 m (5 ft 9 in) |
Weight | 62 kg (137 lb) |
Sport | |
Country | France |
Sport | Athletics |
Event | High jump |
She represented France in the high jump at the 1984 and 1988 Summer Olympics. She set a French national outdoor record of 1.96 m in 1985. Ewanje-Epee also held the NCAA high jump record[1] from 1985 to 1996 with 1.96 m.
Athletics career
editMaryse Éwanjé-Épée set her outdoor personal best on July 21, 1985, jumping 1.96 metres at the French National Athletics Championships in Colombes, France. That was a French national outdoor record that remained unmatched for the next 22 years. Melanie Melfort equalled it by jumping 1.96 metres on August 11, 2007. Éwanjé-Épée's indoor personal best was 1.95 metres, set in 1984.
Éwanjé-Épée won three high jump medals (one silver and two bronzes) at the European Indoor Championships, one high jump bronze medal at the Summer Universiade and one high jump gold medal each at the Jeux de la Francophonie and the Mediterranean Games. She competed for France in the high jump in two consecutive Summer Olympics in 1984 and 1988. She finished 4th and 10th in the Olympic high jump final of 1984 and 1988 respectively. She could not take part in the 1992 and 1996 Summer Olympics because of her failure to clear the minimum Olympic qualifying height by a mere centimetre for both of these Olympics. She won eight indoor high jump and eight outdoor high jump French National Athletics Championships titles at the senior level from 1982 to 1996.
Éwanjé-Épée also attended the University of Arizona, in Tucson (United States) and she still holds the heptathlon record since that time. She held the NCAA high jump record from 1985 to 1996 with 1.96 meters. In 1985, Arizona went 1–2–3 in the NCAA Championships[1] with Katrena Johnson in first place, Maryse Éwanjé-Épée in second, and Camille Harding in third.[2]
Later career
editAfter her retirement from high jumping competition in 1996, Éwanjé-Épée worked as a television sports interviewer, sports administrator, sport consultant and radio/television presenter. She is also the writer of three books, including a biography of Jesse Owens: Jesse, la fabuleuse histoire de Jesse Owens (2016).[3]
Personal life
editÉwanjé-Épée's father, Charles Éwanjé-Épée, is a Camerounian guitarist-singer-songwriter. Her mother, Geneviève Pujol, had a Spanish Catalan grandfather. Maryse Éwanjé-Épée has three sisters and no brothers; her younger sister, Monique Éwanjé-Épée, competed for France in the 60m hurdles and 100m hurdles.[3][4]
Maryse Éwanjé-Épée married Marc Maury in 1988. They have three daughters (Mélissa, Tanya, Maïa) and one son (Mikka). She and Marc Maury divorced in 2007.[4]
Éwanjé-Épée speaks French, English and Spanish fluently.[3]
Results in international competitions
edit- Note: Only the position and height in the final are indicated, unless otherwise stated. (q) means the athlete did not qualify for the final, with the overall position and height in the qualification round indicated.
Year | Competition | Venue | Position | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1982 | European Indoor Championships | Milan, Italy | 10th | 1.88 m |
1983 | European Indoor Championships | Budapest, Hungary | 3rd | 1.92 m |
Universiade | Edmonton, Canada | 3rd | 1.92 m | |
World Championships | Helsinki, Finland | 12th | 1.84 m | |
Mediterranean Games | Casablanca, Morocco | 1st | 1.89 m | |
1984 | European Indoor Championships | Gothenburg, Sweden | 2nd | 1.95 m |
Olympic Games | Los Angeles, United States | 4th | 1.94 m | |
1985 | European Indoor Championships | Piraeus, Greece | 8th | 1.80 m |
1986 | European Indoor Championships | Madrid, Spain | 5th | 1.90 m |
1988 | Olympic Games | Seoul, South Korea | 10th | 1.90 m |
1989 | European Indoor Championships | The Hague, Netherlands | 3rd | 1.91 m |
World Indoor Championships | Budapest, Hungary | 13th | 1.85m | |
Jeux de la Francophonie | Rabat, Morocco | 1st | 1.88 m | |
Universiade | Duisburg, West Germany | 7th | 1.80 m | |
1990 | European Indoor Championships | Glasgow, Scotland | 10th | 1.84 m |
European Championships | Split, Yugoslavia | 18th (q) | 1.75 m |
References
edit- ^ a b Henry, John (September 26, 1985). "UA loses two high jumpers". Arizona Daily Star. Retrieved August 14, 2024.
On June 1, University of Arizona women high jumpers finished 1-2-3 in the NCAA Track and Field Championships.... Now. two of the three have left the team. Maryse Ewanje-Epee, who finished second and later set an NCAA record of 6 feet, 5 inches, did not return to school after a successful summer season competing for her native France.
- ^ Hansen, Greg (July 14, 2016). "Silver Medalist Barrett Soared Above the Rest at High Jump U". Arizona Daily Star. pp. B1. Retrieved August 13, 2024.
- ^ a b c "Mais tisse! Maryse Éwanjé-Epée métisse sa toile" (in French). June 28, 2012.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b "Maryse Éwanjé-Epée" (PDF) (in French).
External links
edit- Maryse Éwanjé-Épée at Olympics at Sports-Reference.com (archived)
- Maryse Éwanjé-Épée at World Athletics
- World women's all-time best high jump