Marie Gayot
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/c/c3/Flag_of_France.svg/23px-Flag_of_France.svg.png)
World Championships | ||
---|---|---|
![]() | 2013 Moscow | 4×400 m relay |
European Championships | ||
![]() | 2014 Zürich | 4 x 400 m |
![]() | 2012 Helsinki | 4x400 m relay |
![]() | 2016 Amsterdam | 4x400 m relay |
European Indoor Championships | ||
![]() | 2015 Prague | 4x400 m relay |
![]() | 2011 Paris | 4x400 m relay |
Marie Gayot (born 18 December 1989 in Reims) is a retired French sprint athlete.[1] She specialized in 400m and set her personal best of 50.97s in 2015 World Championships in Athletics in Beijing.[2] She holds a master's degree in urbanism from Cergy-Pontoise University.[3]
Competition record
She has represented France in the 4 × 400 m relay in London Olympic games where she was a finalist. Her best results include a bronze medal in 2013 World Championships in Athletics in the 4 × 400 m, which was given to her in 2017 after disqualification of the Russian team; and a gold medal in 4 × 400 m in 2015 European Athletics Indoor Championships. She has also participated in World Championships in 2011 and 2015.
References
- ^ Marie Gayot at World Athletics
- ^ "IAAF: Marie Gayot | Profile". iaaf.org. Retrieved 2017-12-15.
- ^ UTC - Université de Technologie de Compiègne (2014-05-21), Marie Gayot, étudiante à l'UTC et athlète olympique, retrieved 2017-12-15
External links
- profile on FFA
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- 1969:
Great Britain (Stirling, Lowe, Simpson, Board)
- 1971:
East Germany (Kühne, Lohse, Seidler, Zehrt)
- 1974:
East Germany (Rohde, Dietsch, Handt, Streidt)
- 1978:
East Germany (Marquardt, Krug, Brehmer, Koch)
- 1982:
East Germany (Siemon, Busch, Rübsam, Koch)
- 1986:
East Germany (Siemon, Busch, Müller, Koch)
- 1990:
East Germany (Derr, Hesselbarth, Müller, Breuer)
- 1994:
France (Landre, Elien, Dorsile, Pérec)
- 1998:
Germany (Feller, Rohländer, Rieger, Breuer)
- 2002:
Germany (Ekpo-Umoh, Rockmeier, Marx, Breuer)
- 2006:
Russia (Pospelova, Ivanova, Zaytseva, Veshkurova)
- 2010:
Germany (Lindenberg, Cremer, Kohlmann, Hoffmann)
- 2012:
Ukraine (Olishevska, Zemlyak, Pyhyda, Lohvynenko)
- 2014:
France (Gayot, Hurtis, Raharolahy, Gueï)
- 2016:
Great Britain (Diamond, Onuora, Doyle, Bundy-Davies)
- 2018:
Poland (Hołub-Kowalik, Baumgart-Witan, Wyciszkiewicz, Święty-Ersetic)
- 2022:
Netherlands (Saalberg, Klaver, Bol, de Witte)
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