Why Alyson Felix will remain a legend?

EUGENE. In April, US sprinter Allyson Felix announced this year would be her last as an athlete.

It’s hard to imagine what the sport will look like without her.

Felix burst on to the scene in 2003 when, aged 17, she finished second in the 200m at the US trials to qualify for her first World Championships.

Two medal-filled decades later, she bowed out in front of a home crowd in Eugene, Oregon, winning bronze as part of the 4x400m mixed relay.

“It was a night I will cherish. I’ve had such good memories,” she said.

“I know it is time and these guys will carry it on into the future. I am at peace stepping into this next stage and have tremendous gratitude for this sport.”

As careers in sport go, they don’t get much better than Felix’s – and off the track she’s had some pretty momentous achievements too, with her activism showing how speaking out can spark real, tangible change.

Here is why Felix will go down as a track-and-field legend:

Even if you don’t follow athletics, you are likely to have heard of the sport’s biggest names — Usain Bolt, anyone?

Felix deserves a place in that group of track-and-field icons. Her gazelle-like running style delivered on the biggest stages time and again to cement her place in the history books

She has won more Olympic medals than any other American track-and-field athlete in history — and seven of the 11 she has taken home are gold.

She’s also won more World Championship medals than anyone else — 19 across five events, 13 of which were gold.

We’re all familiar —perhaps too familiar — with the term ‘GOAT’ in sport, but Felix truly is one of the greatest athletes we have ever seen.

But it’s not just what she’s done on the track that makes her great…

In November 2018, Felix gave birth to daughter Camryn eight weeks prematurely after discovering she had pre-eclampsia, which could have been life-threatening to both her and her baby.

Camryn — born weighing three pounds seven ounces — spent her first month in intensive care.

Pre-eclampsia is disproportionately prevalent among African-American women in the US, and Felix’s experience inspired her to raise awareness of maternal mortality.

In 2019, she spoke at the US Congress.

She said: “After enduring the two most terrifying days of my life, I learned my story was not so uncommon. There were others like me, just like me . . . black like me, healthy like me and doing their best, just like me. And they faced death like me, too.

“We need to provide women of colour with more support during their pregnancies. There’s a level of racial bias within our healthcare system that is troubling and will be difficult to tackle, but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t.”

In May 2019, she wrote an opinion piece for the New York Times explaining that her sponsor Nike wanted to pay her 70 percent less after she became a mother.

“I’ve always known that expressing myself could hurt my career… but you can’t change anything with silence,” she wrote.

“If we have children, we risk pay cuts from our sponsors during pregnancy and afterward. It’s one example of a sports industry where the rules are still mostly made for and by men.”

Three months later Nike changed its stance on maternity pay and promised not to apply any performance-related salary reductions for 18 consecutive months, starting 18 months before the due date of pregnant athletes. BBC Sport.

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