Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Oct 19, 2020 · As the first black British woman to win Olympic gold, Tessa Sanderson was a trailblazer in every sense of the word. The javelin legend also remains the only ...

    • 2 min
    • 3.4K
    • Team GB
  2. www.teamgb.com › athlete › tessa-sandersonTessa Sanderson | Team GB

    A few months after Tessa Sanderson was born, her father went to England in search of work. When her mother joined him a year later, Tessa stayed in Jamaica where she was raised by her grandmother. In the spring of 1965, however, the nine-year-old Tessa was reunited with her parents, although her joy was tempered by the unattractive contrast between her tropical island home and the bleak ...

  3. Tessa Sanderson CBE (born 14 March 1956) is a British former javelin thrower. She appeared in every Olympics from 1976 to 1996, winning the gold medal in 1984, and becoming the second track and field athlete to compete at six Olympics. She is the first Black British woman to win an Olympic gold medal. [1] [2] Since 1979, Sanderson has appeared ...

  4. 1,862 Followers, 440 Following, 422 Posts - Tessa Sanderson CBE (@tessasandersoncbe) on Instagram: "6️⃣ x Olympian Javelin Gold Medalist Brand Ambassador Speaker Presenter Model ‍ ‍ Mum to twins Business Management @blackonsilver.co.uk"

  5. Tessa Sanderson was born in 1956 in St. Elizabeth, on the island of Jamaica, where she first learned to throw the javelin at age 14. She improved rapidly and gained 30 feet in her throwing distance between 1976 and 1977. By 1980, her distance was within one foot of the world record. Although a clear favorite to medal, Sanderson apparently had ...

  6. Mar 14, 2021 · Tessa Sanderson was born in St Elizabeth in Jamaica on March 14, 1956, and moved to Britain at the age of eight to join her parents, who had moved to Wolverhampton a few years earlier ...

  7. Tessa Sanderson (2012) by Simon Burchell/Getty The Voice Newspaper. She is a trailblazer in every sense of the word and while society may have come a long way since her Olympic triumph almost four decades ago, the 65-year-old is still fighting for and promoting black voices – especially in the boardrooms.

  1. People also search for