Birth Date:
September 13, 1967
Birth Place: Dallas, Texas
Residence: San Francisco, CA. USA
College: Baylor University, BBA Marketing, ‘90
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
- ONLY MALE IN
HISTORY TO WIN CONSECUTIVE OLYMPIC GOLD MEDALS IN THE 400M
- ONLY MALE IN HISTORY TO WIN OLYMPIC GOLD MEDALS IN BOTH 200M AND 400M
- Gold Medalist, 400m, Olympic Games, Sydney,
2000
- Gold Medalist, 300m in 30.85 seconds,
Engen Grand Prix, Pretoria, South Africa, 2000
- Gold Medalist, 400m in 43.18 seconds,
World Athletics Championships, Sevilla, 1999
- Gold Medalist, 400m, Olympic Games, Atlanta,
1996
- Gold Medalist, 200m, Olympc Games, Atlanta,
1996
- Gold Medalist, 400m, World Athletics
Championships, Sevilla, 1999
- Gold Medalist, 4x400m Relay, World Athletics
Championships, Sevilla, 1999
- Gold Medalist, 400m, Goodwill Games,
1998
- Gold Medalist, Goodwill Games, World
Record Breaking 4 x 400m Relay, 1998
- Gold Medalist, 400m, World Athletics
Championships, Athens, 1997
- Gold Medalist, 200m in 19.32 seconds,
Olympic Games, Atlanta, 1996
- Gold Medalist, 200m, World Championships,
Göteborg, 1995
- Gold Medalist, 400m, World Championships,
Göteborg, 1995
- Gold Medalist, 200m, Goodwill Games,
1994
- Gold Medalist, 400m, World Athletics
Championships, Stuttgart, 1993
- Gold Medalist, 4x400m Relay, Olympic
Games, Barcelona, 1992
- Gold Medalist, 200m, World Athletics
Championships, Tokyo, 1991
- Gold Medalist, 200m, Goodwill Games,
1990
- US National Champion, 200m, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1995 and 1996
- US National Champion, 400m, 1993, 1995 and 1996
HONORS
-
US Olympic Hall of Fame, 2010
- USA Track and Field Hall Of Fame, 2004
- U.S Male Olympian of the Decade, ESPN
ESPY Award, 1990-1999
- Men’s Track and Field Athlete of
the Year, ESPN ESPY Award, 1999
- International Sportsman of the Year,
1996: BBC (Great Britain), Associated Press, L’Equipe (France)
- Sportsman of the Year, United States
Olympic Committee, 1993, 1995, and 1996
- Jesse Owens Award, 1994, 1995 and 1996
- AAU Sullivan Award, 1996
MICHAEL
JOHNSON
The best 200/400 meter sprinter
in the history of the sport of track & field. Michael Johnson’s
progressions through the ranks of track and field were swift and stunning!
A dual event world champion, the likes of which were never seen before,
Johnson surpassed legends and surged to the top of record books of years
gone by.
During the summer of 1990, his first year as a professional, Johnson
won thirteen consecutive 200 meter races. Obtaining the six fastest
200m times recorded for the year, he secured the number one world ranking.
He also defeated the world’s best 400m sprinters by running four
sub 45 second races securing the number one world ranking in that event
as well. A first in history.
Johnson went on to dominate the international track scene, after establishing
himself in the United States. His first major international breakthrough
came in Edinburgh, Scotland in July, 1990 where he raced in a field
that included, defending Olympic Champion, Joe DeLoach. On a chilly
55 degree night, Johnson destroyed what he called, “the greatest
field I had ever run against,” posting a personal best of 19.85.
He also planned to run, some 400’s later in the season. He ran
four sub 45 second races at 400 meters, defeating the world’s
best, including then world record-holder, Butch Reynolds. Though Johnson
excelled at both distances, he decided to concentrate on the 200m at
the 1991 World Championships where he produced the most convincing 200m
win in a major international competition since Jesse Owens at the 1936
Olympics.
In the 1992 Olympic Trials, Johnson won the 200m with a blazing time
of 19.79 seconds, breaking Carl Lewis’s 19.84 meet record held
since 1984. In the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona, he was plagued with food
poisoning, but competed nonetheless as a member of the 4x400m relay
team that set a new Olympic record and brought home the Gold medal.
Since Johnson had primarily been recognized as a 200 meter sprinter
and had not contested the 400 meters at a major championship, the talk
of the 1993 USA Track and Field Championships was whether he could last
the rounds, gain a top three finish, and qualify for the World Championships.
With the World Record Holder, Butch Reynolds, and 1992 Olympic Champion,
Quincy Watts, in the race, his task appeared formidable. However, he
took no mercy on the field and won the race in a personal record time
of 43.74, the fastest 400 meters ever run on American soil.
Johnson entered the 1993 World Championships in Stuttgart as the favorite
and emerged as a champion, winning the 400m in a Championship Record
time of 43.65, and anchored the World Record setting American 4x400
relay in 42.94, history’s first sub 43.00 relay split.
Throughout 1994, Johnson won all of his 400m races and repeated a gold
medal performance at the Goodwill Games in St. Petersburg, Russia in
July. In the fall of 1994 he was awarded the prestigious Jesse Owens
Award along with being ranked #1 in the World for the third time in
his career in both the 200m and 400m. He continued his incredible winning
streak as he blazed through the 1995 Indoor season with his 40th win
in a row, in the 400m. He broke his previous indoor 400 meter world
record – only three weeks old – with a time of 44.63.
At the 1995 US National Championships in Sacramento, California, Johnson
became the first athlete since 1899, to win both the 200m and 400m US
National Champion titles. During the World Championships in Göteborg,
Sweden, he performed another historic feat – he ran nine races
over nine days and left Sweden as the first man ever to secure World
Championship titles at both 200m and 400m in the same championship.
1996 was the year for Johnson’s unprecedented Olympic double record
breaking victories in both the 200 and 400 meters in Atlanta. He began
his quest to win two gold medals at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta in
top form; seeking redemption for the bout with food poisoning that killed
his individual medal chances in 1992. At the U.S. Olympic Trials in
June, he smashed the seventeen-year-old 200m World Record with a time
of 19.66. At the Olympic Games, he went on to break his own 200m World
Record with a time of 19.32, only three days after winning the 400m
in an Olympic-record 43.49.
Either of Johnson’s victories in Atlanta would have stood alone
as a significant accomplishment in Olympic history. That one athlete
was able to win both events so convincingly in a span of just four days
is purely stunning.
In 1998, Johnson was part of the World Record breaking 4 x 400m relay
at the Goodwill Games in New York during which he also ran the fastest
400m of the year (43.76). He enjoyed continued success in 1999 when
he convincingly broke the 11 year old world record in the 400m at the
World Track & Field Championships in Sevilla, Spain. With a remarkable
time of 43.18, he offered fans an exciting glimpse of what to expect
at the 2000 Summer Olympics.
At the 2000 Olympic Games, Johnson again dazzled the world under the
stadium lights in Sydney when he became the first sprinter in history
to win consecutive Olympic gold medals in the 400m. To top off his career
total eighteen gold medals, Johnson earned gold medal number 19 in the
4x400m relay. Johnson chose to end his career after his double Olympic
gold medal effort at the 2000 Olympic Games, finishing his career with
an impressive total of 19 championship gold medals, 0 bronze, and 0
silver. Johnson again made headlines 8 years later by returning his
gold medal from the Sydney Olympic relay after Antonio Pettigrew announced
that he had used performance enhancing drugs while a member of the US
4x400 meter relay. Johnson, a long time outspoken advocate against performance
enhancing drugs, said he felt the medal was not deserved and wanted
no part of it.
Johnson has not been distracted by the opportunities his talent and
success have offered him. He has been an exceptional example of how
extreme pressure can make one more focused on realizing one’s
own true potential. He has been a role model for children, aspiring
athletes, and professionals everywhere; and his impact on the world
of sport is truly remarkable. Since his retirement from sports, Johnson
has gone on to establish himself as a leading corporate motivational
speaker, working with such companies as Microsoft, Sony, UBS Bank, Bank
of Scotland, and Proctor and Gamble. He has also achieved success as
a television commentator and personality, working for BBC sports, and
presenting documentaries for various television networks. Accordingly,
in 2002, he was awarded the “Television Pundit of the Year Award”
by the UK’s Royal Television Society. In addition, he is a regular
columnist for The Times of London.
Johnson spends most of his time these days as president and founder
of Michael Johnson Performance. MJP operates state of the art sports
training centers and provides training and consulting to professional
athletes and sports teams all over the world. He is also a member and
serves on the board of the Laureus World Sports Academy, a group of
40 legends of sport from around the world, whose Sport For Good Foundation
seeks to achieve social change through the use of sport for children
affected by social and political hardships, such as: disease, war, poverty,
and conflict.
Johnson currently lives in San Francisco, California with his wife Armine
and son Sebastian.