Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. Marjorie Jackson (Coffs Harbour, Nueva Gales del Sur, Australia; 13 de septiembre de 1931) Atleta australiana especialista en pruebas de velocidad que fue campeona olímpica de 100 y 200 metros en los Juegos de Helsinki 1952 y batió varios récords mundiales.

  2. Marjorie Jackson-Nelson AC CVO MBE DStJ (born 13 September 1931) is an Australian former athlete and politician. She was the Governor of South Australia between 2001 and 2007. She finished her sporting career with two Olympic and seven Commonwealth Games Gold Medals, six individual world records [1] and every Australian state and ...

  3. Marjorie JACKSON. Atletismo. Helsinki 1952 | Olympic Games. Words of Olympians. La historia de la primera mujer que ganó un oro olímpico para Australia. En "The Lithgow Flash", Marjorie Jackson recuerda sus primeros entrenamientos, que la llevaron a ganar dos medallas de oro en 1952. Contenido relacionado. Atletismo.

  4. Marjorie Jackson is an Australian athlete who won two Olympic gold medals and tied or set 13 world records. During the early 1950s, when Australians dominated women’s sprint events, Jackson was the most outstanding Australian sprinter. Jackson, known as the “Lithgow Flash” after her hometown, was.

  5. 10.9M subscribers. 140. 20K views 10 years ago #Beijing2022 #Tokyo2020. ...more. 📲 Subscribe to @olympics: http://oly.ch/Subscribe Highlights from the Helsinki 1952 Olympic Games as Marjorie...

  6. 29 de abr. de 2021 · Biography. Marjorie Nelson-Jackson was the supreme female sprinter of the early 1950s. She won the Olympic sprint double in 1952, and at the Commonwealth Games, she won seven sprint gold medals, as follows: 1950 and 1954 100 yards and 220 yards doubles, the 110-220-110 yards relay (with Shirley Strickland and Verna Johnston) and the ...

  7. Marjorie JACKSON. Athletics. Helsinki 1952 | Olympic Games. Words of Olympians. The inspiring story of the first woman to win an Olympic gold for Australia. In “The Lithgow Flash”, Marjorie Jackson recalls her early training leading up to two gold medals in 1952 and her life upon returning home.