Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Lindsey Anderson

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
USA

Event(s)
  
Steeplechase

Residence
  
Ogden, Utah

Coached by
  
Paul Pilkington


Height
  
1.63 m (5 ft 4 in)

Name
  
Lindsey Anderson

Weight
  
52 kg (115 lb)

Role
  
Film director

Lindsey Anderson wwwemptymirrorfilmscomla1ajpg

Born
  
23 May 1985 (
1985-05-23
)
Payson, Utah

Died
  
August 30, 1994, Angouleme, France

Books
  
About John Ford, The diaries, Never Apologise, O Lucky Man!, If....: A Film, Sobre John Ford

Education
  
Cheltenham College, University of Oxford

Nominations
  
BAFTA Award for Best Film

Movies
  
if, O Lucky Man!, This Sporting Life, Britannia Hospital, The Whales of August

Similar People
  
Malcolm McDowell, Karel Reisz, David Sherwin, Tony Richardson, Rachel Roberts

Episode #033 with Lindsey Anderson


Lindsey Anderson (born May 23, 1985 in Payson, Utah) is an American middle distance and steeplechase runner. She is a two-time NCAA All-American, a four-time school record holder at Weber State University, and a six-time Big Sky Conference senior champion. She also set a personal best time of 9:30.75 in the 3,00 meter steeplechase 1 by placing second at the 2008 U.S. Olympic Trials in Eugene, Oregon, which guaranteed her a qualifying place for the Olympics.

Contents

Morgan High School

Anderson, a native of Payson, Utah, started out her athletic career as a middle-distance runner, since she was in seventh grade. Anderson attended Morgan High School, where she had won five state track and cross-country titles, and held starting positions on both the girls' soccer and basketball teams. Coming out of high school, she was offered a full scholarship to study at Weber State University in Ogden, Utah.

Weber State University

While attending the University, Anderson continued to develop into what she called "a pretty, good college runner" in her first two years, before she worked with 1994 Los Angeles marathon champion Paul Pilkington in 2005. Under her coach's direction, Anderson stood out to be an Olympic hopeful, and eventually reached the summit of her career with a runner-up finish in the steeplechase at the 2007 NCAA Outdoor Championships, and a third-place finish at the U.S. Outdoor Championships. Additionally, she earned NCAA All-American honors twice, held four school records in middle-distance running, and won five Big Sky Conference championship titles under the senior division, and won team MVP for the season. Also during Anderson’s senior year of cross country, she was ranked number one in the Big Sky Conference but got sick with bronchitis and received a fourth-place finish in the 5K with a time of 18:09.3. .

Professional and International Racing

In 2008, Anderson posted a career best time of 9:30.75 in the women's steeplechase at the U.S. Olympic Trials in Eugene, Oregon. Finishing second overall in the event, she clinched a spot on the United States team for the Olympics.

At the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, Anderson competed in the first ever women's 3000 m steeplechase, along with her teammates Jennifer Barringer and Anna Willard. She ran in the first heat against sixteen other athletes, including Tunisia's Habiba Ghribi, and Russia's Gulnara Galkina-Samitova, both of whom were top medal contenders in this event. She finished the race in eighth place by five seconds ahead of Ethiopia's Mekdes Bekele, outside her personal best time of 9:36.81. Anderson, however, failed to advance into the final, as she placed twenty-fourth overall, and was ranked below four mandatory slots for the next round.Also, Anderson is usually the smallest competitor in the race, standing at only five foot four inches. However, she has an advantage in steeplechase because she was a jumper.4

Personal life

Formerly Lindsey Olson, she is married to Mark Anderson who is also a runner. 2 They had their first child, a girl in October 2011. They had their second baby in 2014.Also, Anderson is usually the smallest competitor in the race, standing at only five foot four inches. However, she has an advantage in steeplechase because she was a jumper. All throughout Lindsey’s running career she was rarely number one, and suffered from a “fear of failure”. She was only offered two scholarships for running, and both were from Utah.[7]

Coaching career

Coach Anderson coached at Weber State University from 2011 through 2014. Coach Lindsey Anderson accepted an offer at California State University Bakersfield in July 2014

"Marcia Mansur-Wentworth thinks she is going to be a great role model for our young women and young men and I am just thrilled that she wants to help us.” Anderson brings several years of coaching experience to Bakersfield after being an assistant coach for her alma mater, Weber State. She also competed for Oiselle, a women's running company that sponsors several elite female runners like Kara Goucher and Lauren Fleshman."

References

Lindsey Anderson Wikipedia