Tessa Sanderson

Theresa Ione "Tessa" Sanderson, CBE (born 14 March 1956) is a British former javelin thrower and heptathlete. A six-time Olympian in the javelin from 1976 to 1996, she won the gold medal in 1984 for Great Britain, and in 1996 she became the second track and field athlete, after discus thrower Lia Manoliu, to compete at six Olympics. She is the first black British woman to have won an Olympic gold medal.

Tessa Sanderson
CBE
Sanderson in 2008
Personal information
Full nameTheresa Ione Sanderson[1]
NationalityBritish
Born (1956-03-14) 14 March 1956[1]
St Elizabeth, Jamaica
Sport
Country Great Britain (1973–1996)
SportAthletics
Event(s)Javelin throw
Turned pro1973
Retired1997
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s)73.58 m (1983)

Sanderson also won gold medals in the javelin throw at three Commonwealth Games (1978, 1986 and 1990) and at the 1992 IAAF World Cup. She was runner-up at the 1978 European Athletics Championships, and competed in three world championships (1983, 1987, and 1997). She was AAAs National Champion ten times, UK National Champion three times. She set ten UK senior records and five Commonwealth records in the javelin, as well as records at both junior and masters levels.

During her career, she had an ongoing acrimonious rivalry with fellow Briton Fatima Whitbread. Sanderson has made numerous television appearances as a guest, and worked as a sports reporter for Sky News when it first aired in 1989. She was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 1985 New Year's Honours, raised to Officer (OBE) in 1998, and later to Commander (CBE) in the 2004 New Year's Honours. Sanderson served as Vice-Chairman of Sport England from 1999 to 2005, and in 2009 established the Tessa Sanderson Foundation and Academy, which aims to encourage young people and people with disabilities to take up sport.

Early life

Sanderson was born on 14 March 1956 in St Elizabeth, Jamaica,[1] of Ghanaian ancestry.[2] Her parents left Jamaica to find work in England when Sanderson was five, and she was in the care of her grandmother until going to live her parents in Wednesfield at the age of six. Her P.E. teacher at Ward's Bridge High School, Barbara Richards, noted her talent for athletics and encouraged her, also making threats of putting Sanderson in after-school detention if she did not train, an approach that Sanderson later said helped her.[3][4] She first threw a javelin at the age of 14, when betting with a friend for a bag of chips over who would be able to throw it further.[5]

Athletics career

Early career

She was a member of Wolverhampton & Bilston Athletics Club, competing in both javelin and multi-event disciplines.[1] In 1972, aged 16, Sanderson won the Intermediate javelin at the English Schools' Athletics Championships.[1] The following year she was selected to compete in the javelin throw at the 1973 European Athletics Junior Championships, where she reached the final but finished 12th with 39.18 m (128 ft 6 12 in), well behind the winner, Tonya Khristova, who threw 54.84 m (179 ft 11 in).[6]:1718 After this competition, Sanderson decided to focus on the javelin event rather than pentathlon, partly because she expected competing in the javelin to provide more opportunities for travel.[6] She made her senior international debut in the javelin throw at the 1974 British Commonwealth Games, finishing fifth. Later that year, she finished 13th at the 1974 European Athletics Championships. Sanderson broke the UK javelin throw junior record five times, achieving 55.04 m (180 ft 6 34 in) in 1974. She became the national record holder in 1976, throwing 56.14 m (184 ft 2 in). She went on to achieve ten new UK senior records and five Commonwealth records.[1]

Ruth Fuchs, who was the world record holder when Sanderson made the second-longest javelin throw

1976 saw Sanderson's Olympic debut, at 1976 Summer Olympics. Aged 20, she was the youngest of the competitors in her event, and threw 57.00 m (187 ft 0 in) to finish ninth.[1] In July 1977, at the European Cup semi-finals in Dublin, she achieved 67.20 m (220 ft 5 12 in), at the time a UK record and the second longest distance achieved by a woman; Ruth Fuchs, holder of the world record, qualified in second place.[7] At the European Cup finals it was Fuchs who won the gold, with Sanderson taking the silver.[8] At the 1977 IAAF World Cup, Sanderson won bronze.[9]

Sanderson won her first major gold medal with a throw of 61.34 m (201 ft 2 34 in) the 1978 Commonwealth Games, the first time that England had won gold in the women's javelin at the games since 1962.[1] A few weeks later, Sanderson took silver at the 1978 European Athletics Championships as runner-up to Fuchs,[10] and at the 1979 European Cup again finished behind Fuchs, with both of them losing out to champion Éva Ráduly-Zörgő.[11]

She went to the 1980 Summer Olympics rated as the third-best woman javelin thrower of all time, but failed to meet the qualifying standard for the final, achieving only 48.76 m (159 ft 11 12 in) with her first throw, and having her other two attempts declared "no-throws".[12]

After the 1980 Olympics, she approached Wilf Paish at the Carnegie Institute of P.E. in Leeds to coach her.[3] He agreed to become her coach, and she moved to live with his family.[2] A throw of 61.56 m (201 ft 11 12 in) was enough for Sanderson to win at the 1981 Pacific Conference Games.[13] At the 1981 European Cup, Sanderson was runner-up, with Antoaneta Todorova having produced a world-record throw to win.[14] Later in 1981, Sanderson suffered an Achilles tendon rupture in her left leg and also broke a bone in her throwing arm. An operation on her Achilles tendon was unsuccessful, and she required another operation. The injuries prevented her from competing for twenty-two months.[3] Sanderson was fourth at the 1983 World Championships, where her rival Fatima Whitbread won silver.[15] At the 1983 World Championships, she injured her Achilles tendon again, and had both operations on both Achilles tendons a few days after the end of the competition.[3]

Olympic gold and later career

When Sanderson won the gold medal at the 1984 Summer Olympics in the javelin, it was Great Britain's first Olympic win in a throwing event since the instigation of the modern Olympics in 1896. She set a new Olympic record with her throw of 69.56 m (228 ft 2 12 in). Whitbread won bronze.[16] She also became the first black British woman to have won an Olympic gold medal.[17] Sanderson also won gold at the 1986 Commonwealth Games, with Whitbread taking silver.[18]

In March 1987, Sanderson announced that she would be focusing on the heptathlon rather than the javelin throw. Shortly before that, she had moved to London, and was looking for a career change to television or promotional work.[19] She later threatened to boycott athletics events, for which she was being paid £1,000 each by British Athletics whilst Whitbread was being paid £10,000 per event, and agreed a new deal at the start of June.[20] At the Dairy Crest Games in August, Whitbread, who had been undefeated during the season, injured her shoulder whilst Sanderson won the event and then announced that she would be training with Mick Hill in Italy for the world championships.[21] Whitbread won the World Championship gold, with Sanderson finishing fourth.[22] By this time, former pop star Adam Faith was engaged as Sanderson's agent.[23]

Sanderson burst the skin around her ankle, exposing her Achilles tendon, around ten days before taking part in the 1988 Summer Olympics as defending champion.[24] She failed to qualify for the final, and left the competition limping, with blood visible on the bandage on her injured ankle.[25] She left the stadium on crutches before the medal ceremony, where Whitbread was presented with the silver medal after finishing as runner-up to Petra Felke.[26]

Having announced after the 1988 Olympics that she would retire from the javelin throw, Sanderson made an unexpected return to competition in 1989,[27] at the McVitie's International Challenge, where she finished third.[28] She was also third at the 1989 European Cup despite still being short of fitness.[29] At the 1990 Commonwealth Games, a throw of 65.72 m (215 ft 7 14 in) was enough for Sanderson to retain her title.[30] At the 1990 European Athletics Championships Sanderson finished twelfth,[31] but was later upgraded to eleventh after Felicia Ţilea was disqualified.[32][33] Aged 35, Sanderson won at the 1991 European Cup, ahead of a field that included the reigning world record holder Felke.[34]

Her fifth Olympic appearance, at the 1992 Summer Olympics, set a new record for Olympic appearances by a British athlete.[35] Her best throw of 68.54 m (224 ft 10 14 in) was almost five metres less than the winning distance achieved by Silke Renk.[36] At the 1992 World Cup Sanderson won gold with a throw of 61.86 m (202 ft 11 14 in), nearly three metres further than any other competitor.[37]

Return to competition

Fatima Whitbread, whose rivalry with Sanderson was often written about in the British press

After a four-year hiatus, Sanderson returned to track and field competition in 1996.[38] She achieved new masters record throws of 58.18 m (190 ft 10 12 in) and 60.64 m (198 ft 11 14 in) in each of her first two throws in May, surpassing the previous record of 51.84 m (170 ft 34 in).[1] After two further masters record throws,[1] she increased the record to 64.06 m (210 ft 2 in) at the Securicor Games in July.[38][1] At the 1996 Summer Olympics she became the second track and field athlete, after discus thrower Lia Manoliu, to compete at six Olympics, but did not qualify for the final.[39] She also failed to qualify for the final at the 1997 World Championships, which was her last international appearance.[1]

An article by Alan Hubbard in The Observer in 1990 said of Sanderson and Whitbread that "their hate-hate relationship has been one of the most enduring in British sport", citing Sanderson's perception that Whitbread received preferential treatment from the British Amateur Athletic Board, whose promotions officer was a family friend of Whitbread; and the support that Whitbread and Whitbread's mother (who coached Whitbread) publicly supported Sue Howland who had been allowed to compete at the 1990 Commonwealth Games.[40] In 2009, Tom Lamont wrote in The Guardian that "Whitbread and Sanderson were always uneasy rivals and the enmity that developed during their overlapping careers became as famous as their achievements, and seems to survive in their retirement".[2]

Sanderson retired from competition in 1997, her rival Whitbread having retired five years earlier.[2] Sanderson's career-best javelin throw was 73.58 m (241 ft 4 34 in) in Edinburgh on 26 June 1983.[41] She had also competed in pentathlon and heptathlon events,[1] setting new UK and Commonwealth records for the heptathlon twice in 1981.[42]

Sports administration

Sanderson served as Vice-Chairman of Sport England from 1999 to 2005.[43] In 2006, she started an academy in the Newham, London that helped to find and train athletes to represent Britain in the 2012 Summer Olympics.[44] In September 2009, The Tessa Sanderson Foundation and Academy was established, with the aim of encouraging young people and people with disabilities to take up sport, and providing mentoring and support.[45]

From 2009 to 2013, Sanderson organised an annual 10 km race in Newham, with part of the route being through the Olympic Park. The 2013 event attractied 3,000 participants representing 45 different nationalities. However, the event was cancelled in 2014, with Sanderson claiming that the local authority, Newham Council, had been delaying meetings about the event, and had been looking to double the fee payable.[46][47] Sanderson was appointed as a board member of the Olympic Park Legacy Company chaired by Baroness Ford, to "develop and manage" the Olympic Park following the 2012 Olympics.[48][49]

Media work

Sanderson was a guest on television shows including A Question of Sport (in 1979), Punchlines (1984), The Krypton Factor Olympic Celebrity Special (1984), Sporting Triangles (1987 and 1988), Celebrity Wheel of Fortune (1989), Busman's Holiday Celebrity Special (1991), Catchphrase Celebrity Special (1991), Celebrity Wife Swap (2009)[50] and Bullseye (1984).[51]

When Sky News was launched in 1989, she worked as a sports reporter for the channel.[52] She also appeared alongside Cilla Black as a co-host on ITV's Surprise Surprise.[53] In 2005, she took part in the one-off special, Strictly African Dancing, as part of the Africa Lives season on the BBC.[54] She performed a "traditional 'dance celebrating the return home of the menfolk'" and was voted into third place by the viewers.[55] Sanderson starred in the fitness videos "Cardiofunk" (1990) "Body Blitz" (circa 1992) with Derrick Evans.[56][57]

She appeared in "Billy's Olympic Nightmare", a one-off exclusive BBC Red Button episode of EastEnders which was aired on 16 July 2012.[58] and was a contestant in Dancing on Ice goes Gold program on ITV on 22 July 2012. In 2018, Sanderson featured in Channel 5's reality series Celebrity 5 Go Barging.[59] At 58 years of age, she began working as a model for the Grey Model Agency.[4]

Honours

Fencing at Sanderson Park

Sanderson was selected as a British Athletics Writers' Association Athlete of the Year in 1977, 1978 and 1984,[60] and inaugurated into the England Athletics Hall of Fame in 2012[61] Potential candidates for inclusion in the Hall of Fame are selected by a panel of experts, with the decision on inclusion then being determined by a public vote.[62]

She was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 1985 New Year's Honours, following her Olympic gold, raised to Officer (OBE) in the 1998 New Year's Honours for her charity work, and later to Commander (CBE) in the 2004 New Year's Honours for her services to Sport England.[63]

Sanderson is an honorary graduate of the University of Wolverhampton[64] and was made an Honorary Fellow of London South Bank University in 2004.[65] In 2004, Sanderson was voted one of 100 Great Black Britons in a poll established after the BBC's 100 Greatest Britons failed to include any black Britons.[66][67] Later in the same year she was presented with a Sportswomen of the Year Lifetime Achievement award by The Sunday Times.[68] In Wednesfield there is a housing estate located near where she started learning the javelin throw, Sanderson Park, named after her.[69] There is also a road named after her in Wandsworth Road, South London, Tessa Sanderson Place.[70]

Personal life

Sanderson has spoken about the discrimination she had faced as a black woman. In 1990, she told The Guardian that she had faced racial discrimination, although not in her sporting career; and that she felt sexism was the reason that women athletes were not adequately paid.[71] Growing up she experienced racist language and behaviour in school, including being spat on,[72] and has spoken about how, following her Olympic gold in 1984, she received a racist letter saying that she was not truly British.[73] She told Sky Sports in October 2020 that "Black athletes didn't have the voice they have now, so I just had to fight my own battles" and that she was disappointed by the continuing lack of black, Asian and minority ethnic representation in sports governing bodies.[73]

In the 1970s, the use of performance-enhancing drugs was common in throwing events, and Sanderson spoke against the practice,[74] consistently maintaining an anti-doping stance.[6]:159165[72] Her rival Fuchs later admitted to using steroids during competition.[75]

Tessa: My Life in Athletics, Sanderson's autobiography, was published in 1986.[76] In 1990 Sanderson was awarded £30,000 in damages by the High Court of Justice over newspaper claims that by starting an affair with Evans, who later became known as Mr. Motivator, she had "stolen another woman's husband." Sanderson contended that her affair with Evans had begun only after his marriage had broken up.[5]

On 3 May 2010, she married Densign White, a former Olympic judo athlete, at St. Paul's Cathedral in London. Her bridesmaids were her fellow Olympic teammates Sharron Davies, Kelly Holmes and Christine Ohuruogu.[77] Sanderson unsuccessfully received In vitro fertilisation treatment three times before she was 50. In 2013, she and White started fostering four-month old twins, Cassius and Ruby Mae, and the couple adopted the twins the following year, when Sanderson was aged 58.[4][78] Her nephew, Dion Sanderson, is a footballer who made his debut for Wolverhampton Wanderers in October 2019.[79]

National titles (Javelin throw)

Midland Counties Championships titles

  • Javelin throw 1974, 1975, 1977[84]
  • Pentathlon 1976[84]
  • 400m hurdles, 1977[84]

Seasonal bests (Javelin throw)

[6]:181[85]

Seasonal rankings

(only top 25 positions shown)[85]

Personal bests

Event Best Date Notes Ref
Javelin throw 73.58 m 26 June 1983 in Edinburgh [41]
200 m 24.89 s 1981 [1]
400 m 57.3 s 1972 [1]
800 m 2:26.20 1981 [1]
100 m hurdles 13.46 s 1981 [1]
400 m hurdles 60.46 s 1977 [1]
High jump 1.69 m 1973 [1]
Long jump 5.97 m 1981 [1]
Shot put 13.27 m 1981 [1]
Heptathlon 6125 pts 1981 [1]
60 m hurdles (indoors) 8.5s 1977 [1]
Pentathlon (indoors) 3623 pts 1973 [1]

International competitions (Javelin throw)

YearCompetitionVenuePositionNotes
Representing  Great Britain and  England
1973 European Junior Championships Duisburg, West Germany 12th 39.18 m
1974 British Commonwealth Games Christchurch, New Zealand 5th 48.54 m
European Championships Rome, Italy 13th (q) 53.28 m
1976 Olympic Games Montreal, Canada 10th 57.00 m
1977 European Cup Helsinki, Finland 2nd 62.36 m
World Cup Düsseldorf, West Germany 3rd 60.30 m
1978 Commonwealth Games Edmonton, Canada 1st 61.34 m
European Championships Prague, Czechoslovakia 2nd 62.40 m
1979 European Cup Turin, Italy 3rd 62.38 m
1980 Olympic Games Moscow, Soviet Union 19th (q) 48.76 m
1981 Pacific Conference Games Christchurch, New Zealand 1st 61.56 m
European Cup Zagreb, Yugoslavia 2nd 65.94 m
1983 World Championships Helsinki, Finland 4th 64.76 m
1984 Olympic Games Los Angeles, United States 1st 69.56 m
1986 Commonwealth Games Edinburgh, United Kingdom 1st 69.80 m
1987 World Championships Rome, Italy 4th 67.54 m
1988 Olympic Games Seoul, South Korea 21st (q) 56.70 m
1989 European Cup Gateshead, United Kingdom 3rd 59.72 m
1990 Commonwealth Games Auckland, New Zealand 1st 65.72 m
European Championships Split, Yugoslavia 12th 57.56 m
1991 European Cup Frankfurt, Germany 1st 65.18 m
1992 Olympic Games Barcelona, Spain 4th 63.58 m
World Cup Havana, Cuba 1st 61.86 m
1996 European Cup Madrid, Spain] 4th 58.18 m
Olympic Games Atlanta, United States 14th (q) 58.86 m
1997 World Championships Athens, Greece 18th (q) 57.84 m

Notes:

  • Results with a q, indicate overall position in qualifying round
  • At the World Cup competitions, Sanderson was representing Europe.

Media appearances

Television and radio

These are UK television appearances unless otherwise noted.
YearProgrammeRoleRef
1979The Superstars: The Women's Championshipparticipant[86]
1979A Question of Sportparticipant[50]
1984Punchlinesparticipant[50]
1984Bullseyeparticipant[51]
1984Crackerjackguest[87]
1984The Krypton Factor Olympic Celebrity Specialparticipant[50]
1985Blankety Blankguest[88]
1986Tessa Sandersonparticipant[50]
1987Sporting Triangles (2 episodes)participant[50]
1987The Grand Knockout Tournamentparticipant[89]
1987Through the Keyholeparticipant[90]
1988Which School and Why?participant[50]
1988Sporting Triangles (3 episodes)cast member[50]
1989Special Awards Presentationparticipant[50]
1989Sunday Sundayguest[50]
1989Sky Newssports reporter[52]
1989Celebrity Wheel of Fortuneparticipant[50]
1989Grand Finalparticipant[50]
1989Tessa Sanderson[50]
1990Afternoonparticipant[50]
1990Telethon – Thanks to Youparticipant[50]
1990Bullyingparticipant[50]
1990On the Lineparticipant[50]
1991Get Up, Stand Upparticipant[50]
1991Busman's Holiday Celebrity Specialparticipant[50]
1991Visionsparticipant[50]
1991Catchphrase Celebrity Specialparticipant[50]
1992TV Squashguest[50]
1992Tessa Sanderson M.B.E.guest[50]
1992Surprise Surprise (3 episodes)host[50]
1993Benn V Eubank: Round One – The Best of Enemiesguest[50]
1993Inside Infoparticipant[50]
1993Celebrity Squaresguest[91]
1993The Real McCoyparticipant[92]
1993Going for Gold[lower-alpha 1]presenter[93]
1993Cluedo (episode: The Hanged Man)participant[50]
1994Capital Womanpresenter[50]
1995They Think It's All Overparticipant[94]
1996Win, Lose or Drawparticipant[95]
1996Noel's Telly Yearsparticipant[96]
1996Sunday Mattersparticipant[50]
1996Desert Island Discs[lower-alpha 2]guest[97]
1997Ha Bloody Haparticipant[50]
1997Night Fever – Abba Specialparticipant[50]
1999h&p@bbcparticipant[98]
2002The Essential...Daley Thompsonparticipant[50]
2003Russell Grant's Sporting Scandalsparticipant[50]
2005Trisha Goddard (2 episodes)participant[50]
2005Big Brother's Little Brotherguest[50]
2005The Wright Stuffpanellist[50]
2006Strictly African Dancingparticipant[54]
2006The Wright Stuffpanellist[50]
2007What the World Thinks of Godguest[50]
1999Antiques Roadshowparticipant[99]
2009Celebrity Wife Swapparticipant[50]
2010Cash in the Celebrity Atticparticipant[100]
2010Celebrity MasterChefparticipant[101]
2012Celebrity Antiques Road Tripparticipant[102]
2012EastEnders: Billy's Olympic Nightmareherself[58]
2012A Question of Sportparticipant[103]
2012Dotun Adebayo[lower-alpha 3]participant[104]
2012Dancing on Ice Goes Goldparticipant[50]
2016Pointless Celebritiesparticipant[105]
2015All Star Mr & Mrsparticipant[106]
2016Pointless Celebrities (2 episodes)participant[107][108]
2016A Question of Sportparticipant[109]
2019The Junk Food Experimentparticipant[110]
2016Tenable All Starsparticipant[111]
2018Celebrity 5 Go Bargingparticipant[59]
2019Sink Or Swim For Stand Up To Cancerparticipant[112]
2020Bargain Hunt: Newmarket 31 (Sport Relief Special)participant[113]

Pantomime

YearTitleRoleVenueRef
1990–91Robinson CrusoeGirl FridayGuildford[114]
1991–92AladdinThe GenieBrighton Dome[115]
1994–95Robinson CrusoeGirl FridayBournemouth Pavillion[115][116]
1995–96CinderellaFairy GodmotherLewisham Theatre[117]

See also

Notes

  1. Programme about the likelihood of Manchester hosting the 2000 Olympics; not Going for Gold
  2. Radio
  3. Radio; with Dotun Adebayo

References

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