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Carl Lewis
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Carl Lewis

Born 1961
Fact
Nine Olympic gold medals across four Games
Fact
Four consecutive Olympic long jump golds over twelve years
Fact
Named World Athlete of the Century

Carl Lewis won nine Olympic gold medals and ten World Championship golds across four consecutive Olympic Games — one of the longest sustained periods of dominance in track and field history. He matched Jesse Owens by winning the same four events at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.

Lewis was the master of the long jump, winning four consecutive Olympic golds in the event from 1984 to 1996 — a feat of consistency spanning twelve years that may never be repeated. His 100-meter gold at Seoul in 1988 came after Ben Johnson was disqualified for doping.

Born in Birmingham, Alabama and raised in New Jersey, Lewis was part of an athletic family. His mother was a former Olympian. He was named World Athlete of the Century by the International Association of Athletics Federations.

Life is about timing.
— Carl Lewis
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Key Milestones

A Life in Firsts

1961
Born in Birmingham, Alabama; raised in Willingboro, New Jersey
1984
Wins four gold medals at Los Angeles Olympics, matching Owens
1988
Wins 100m gold at Seoul after Johnson disqualification
1991
Sets 100m world record of 9.86 at age 30
1996
Wins fourth consecutive Olympic long jump gold at Atlanta
1999
Named World Athlete of the Century

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