The Olympian

World Records

1988 Olympic Trials:
100 Meters 10.49 seconds

1988 Olympic Finals:
200 Meters 21.34 seconds

Olympic Medals

1984 Olympics
200 Meters
Silver Medal

1988 Olympics
100 Meters
Gold Medal

1988 Olympics
200 Meters
Gold Medal

1988 Olympics
400 Meters
Gold Medal

1988 Olympic Silver Medal

1988 Olympics
1,600 Meters
Silver Medal

Awards

1988: Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year

1988: United States Olympic Committee Sportswoman of the Year

1988: Sullivan Award (awarded to top amateur athlete)

1988: Jesse Owens Outstanding Track and Field Athlete

1995: Inducted into the U.S.A. Track and Field Hall of Fame

Recipient of a Distinguished Service Award from the United Negro College Fund

Achievements

She graduated from Jordan High School in Los Angeles in 1978, and attended California State University at Northridge for two years, then graduated from the University of California at Los Angeles in 1983 with a degree in psychology.

She won a silver medal in the 200-meter dash at the 1984 Olympics in her hometown of Los Angeles.

She married Al Joyner on October 10, 1987. They have a daughter, Mary Ruth.

At the 1988 Olympic trials she ran the three fastest 100-meter times ever by a woman and set the American record in the 200-meter dash.

Also at the 1988 Olympic trials, she introduced her self-made apparel. One outfit was a purple bodysuit with a turquoise bikini brief over it, but with nothing on her left leg, a design she referred to as a “one-legger.”

At the Olympics, she painted three of her fingernails red, white and blue, and she painted a fourth gold to signify her goal of winning a gold medal.

Flo-Jo still holds world records in the 100- and 200-meter dashes. She set the 100-meter record of 10.49 seconds in the quarterfinals of the 1988 Olympic trials in Indianapolis, and since then, no one has even broken 10.60. At Seoul, she won the gold medal in a wind-aided 10.54.

She captured three gold medals at the 1988 Seoul Games and set world records that still stand for 100- and 200-meter dashes.

Flo-Jo set the world record in the 200-meter dash in the Olympic final, clocking in at 21.34 seconds. Marion Jones, with a 21.62 at the World Cup in South Africa and Merlene Ottey, with a 21.64 in Brussels, remain the only other women to run the 200m in under 21.70 seconds.

Flo-Jo won a gold medal in the 400-meter relay, and just missed a fourth gold medal when the U.S. team won the silver in the 1,600 relay, which she anchored.

She was voted the Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year for 1988, and she won the Sullivan Award as the nation’s top amateur athlete.

Flo-Jo retired from track after the Seoul Olympics.

She served as co-chair of the President’s Council on Physical Fitness.

She tried a comeback before the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, but problems with her right Achilles’ tendon forced her to abandon the attempt.