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Quick Facts
Represents: USA
Age:
25 (Sept. 25, 1984)
College: University of Texas
Hometown: San Antonio, Texas
Residence: Dallas, Texas
Affiliation: adidas
Coach: Jon Drummond
Personal Bests:
100m 10.93 (2008)
200m 22.34 (2008)
Long Jump(i) 6.71m/22 feet, 0.25 inch (2006) |

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Career Highlights
- 5th, 2008 Olympics, 200m
- 3rd, 2008 US Olympic Trials, 200m
- 4th, 2008 US Olympic Trials, 100m
- 2006 NCAA Indoor Champion, 60m and Long Jump
- 2005 NCAA Champion, 100m and
4x100m relay
- 2005 NCAA Runner-up, Long Jump
- 2005 and 2006 Big 12 Champion 100m, 200m and LJ
- 8-time All-American
- 2005 US Track and Field and Cross
Country Coaches Association Women’s Athlete of the Year
- 2002 IAAF World Junior Championship bronze medalist, 100m
- 5-time 5A Texas State Champion and
12-time All-American at Southwest High School in San Antonio
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Background
Here’s a clue to the kind of athletic family from which Marshevet Myers (née Hooker) hails: as a middle-school basketball player, she wore number 33 to imitate her mother, Marvetta, who played college basketball for St. Mary’s University in San Antonio. Father Ricky played there, too, and was good enough in 1983 to be drafted in the sixth round by the San Antonio Spurs. And her only sister, Destinee, is a two-time NCAA Champion in the high jump, in 2006 and 2007.
Even two-on-one, Marshevet says, she and her sister have never beaten their father in a game of basketball. (“Never once,” she says emphatically.) Track might be another matter. Marshevet had a fine 2007 indoor season in her debut as a pro, winning the Reebok Boston Indoor Games and the Tyson Invitational on her way to a third-place finish at the AT&T USA Indoor Track & Field Championships, but in the outdoor season was knocked out of the US championships in the 100-meter semifinals. In the offseason, she began training under 2000 Olympic 4x100-meter relay gold medalist Jon Drummond.
Then, at the 2008 Reebok Grand Prix, Marshevet blasted to a second-place finish at 100 meters behind only Veronica Campbell-Brown, the reigning World Champion, in a huge personal best of 10.94 seconds. "I'm more excited about (track) than I've ever been," she told the San Antonio News-Express a few days later. "... I'm feeling so comfortable right now." Just three weeks later, Marshevet improved her personal best again to 10.93 when she finished a disappointing fourth in an especially deep field in the 100m at the US Olympic Trials. Undaunted, Marshevet was entered in the 200m and, in the final, dove across the line to finish third and qualify for her first Olympic Games.
Following the US Trials, Marshevet competed in high level grand prix meets in Stockholm and London, finishing second and third, respectively. At the Olympics, Marshevet comfortably qualified through the rounds and finished fifth in the final, setting a new personal best in the process. After the Olympics, Marshevet returned to Europe for a few more races, among which she took second and third in the 100m and 200m at the IAAF World Athletics Final, as well as a first place finish over 200m at the IVD Memorial Golden League meet in Brussels, Belgium.
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