Army News Service
LONDON, Aug. 9, 2012 – Air Force family
member Janay DeLoach leaped 6.89 meters last night at Olympic Stadium here to
take the bronze medal in women’s long jump at the Summer Olympics.
USA teammate Brittney Reese won the gold
with a jump of 7.12 meters, and Russia’s Elena Sokolova earned the silver with
a jump of 7.07.
DeLoach said Reese motivates her to
improve and provides advice. “She helps me get on the board,” DeLoach said of
her first-place teammate.
Reese isn’t her only supporter, though.
“My dad’s here with me, cheering me on,”
DeLoach said. “He’s been there the whole way through. … He’s always supported
me in all my endeavors.”
Her father is retired Air Force Chief
Master Sgt. William DeLoach, whose last assignment was at Edwards Air Force
Base, Calif. He now works as a contractor there with the 416th Flight Test
Squadron.
His daughter began competing in long
jump at Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska, at age 13.
“I didn’t get too many meets in, but you
know, it set the stage for where I am now,” DeLoach said of competing in track
and field at Ben Eielson High School.
She went on to compete in track and
field at Colorado State University, but said she didn’t really get serious
about long jumping until last year.
“That was the year that I won indoors,”
said the 26-year-old, 5-foot-5-inch athlete. DeLoach won the World Indoor
Championship last year with a jump of 6.99 meters.
At the Olympic track and field trials in
Eugene, Ore. five weeks ago, DeLoach earned the No. 3 spot on the USA team with
a jump of 7.03 meters.
At the long-jump finals here, DeLoach
was in third place early with her first attempt of 6.77 meters. Then the second
jump for Brittney Reese of the United States put her in first place with a
7.12-meter leap. This dropped DeLoach to fourth place.
After three jumps, DeLoach remained in
fourth place, with her longest jump still the initial 6.77 meters. But it was
enough to put her in the top eight and give her an opportunity for three more
attempts.
On her fourth jump, DeLoach leaped 6.74
meters, still just short of her first attempt and still in fourth place. On her
fifth attempt, however, DeLoach soared through the air for a jump of 6.89
meters. She got up out of the sand pit with a smile.
After judges registered the distance,
DeLoach realized she was one centimeter in front of Latvia’s Ineta Radevica for
the bronze. The Latvian had jumped 6.88 meters on her first try in the finals.
On her final attempt, Redevica flew
across the sand and planted her feet close to DeLoach’s best of the day. But
judges measured it at 6.79 meters, 10 centimeters short of the bronze.
“Oh I was crumbling,” DeLoach said. “I
was like, ‘Please God, let me have this bronze medal.’ I knew she could do it,
but it just didn’t happen at this point. … I inched her out by just a centimeter.”
Then Russia’s Anna Nazorova made her
last attempt, again looking close to the mark DeLoach set. But the jump was
measured at 6.62 and DeLoach threw her hands up in joy, realizing she had the
bronze medal.
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