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Barbadian hurdler (born 1990)
Shane Rashad Brathwaite (born 8 February 1990 in
Bridgetown) is a hurdler from
Barbados who competed in the
110 metres hurdles at the
2012 Summer Olympics but did not finish the race in the qualifying heats.
[2] His gold medal in the
octathlon at the
2007 World Youth Championships in Athletics made him the first person from Barbados to win a gold medal at a global athletics championship.
[3]
He competed at the
2020 Summer Olympics.
[4]
Brathwaite competed for
Texas Tech University at
Lubbock,
Texas.
[5] Although he shares a birthplace, surname and specialty with
Ryan Brathwaite, the two are not related.
[3]
[6]
Competition record
Year |
Competition |
Venue |
Position |
Event |
Notes
|
Representing
Barbados
|
2006
|
Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships (U17)
|
Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
|
1st
|
Octathlon
|
4599 pts
|
2007
|
CARIFTA Games (U20)
|
Providenciales,
Turks and Caicos
|
4th
|
Heptathlon (junior)
|
4409 pts
|
World Youth Championships
|
Ostrava, Czech Republic
|
1st
|
Octathlon
|
6261 pts
|
2008
|
CARIFTA Games (U20)
|
Basseterre, Saint Kitts and Nevis
|
3rd
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
41.59
|
1st
|
Heptathlon (junior)
|
5006 pts
|
World Junior Championships
|
Bydgoszcz,
Poland
|
21st (sf)
|
400m hurdles
|
53.09
|
2009
|
Pan American Junior Championships
|
Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
|
3rd
|
110 m hurdles (99 cm)
|
13.41
|
2010
|
NACAC U23 Championships
|
Miramar, Florida,
United States
|
4th
|
110m hurdles
|
13.80 (+3.1 m/s) w
|
Central American and Caribbean Games
|
Mayagüez, Puerto Rico
|
6th
|
110 m hurdles
|
14.04
|
2011
|
Central American and Caribbean Championships
|
Mayagüez, Puerto Rico
|
4th
|
110 m hurdles
|
13.75
|
2012
|
NACAC U23 Championships
|
Irapuato,
México
|
1st
|
110m hurdles
|
13.31 (+1.8 m/s) A
|
5th
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
40.30 A
|
Olympic Games
|
London, United Kingdom
|
–
|
110 m hurdles
|
DNF
|
2013
|
Central American and Caribbean Championships
|
Morelia, Mexico
|
1st
|
110m hurdles
|
13.70
|
4th
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
39.56
|
2014
|
Commonwealth Games
|
Glasgow, United Kingdom
|
3rd
|
110 m hurdles
|
13.49
|
2015
|
World Championships
|
Beijing, China
|
10th (sf)
|
110m hurdles
|
13.31
|
2016
|
World Indoor Championships
|
Portland, United States
|
8th
|
60 m hurdles
|
7.88
|
2017
|
World Championships
|
London, United Kingdom
|
6th
|
110 m hurdles
|
13.32
|
14th (h)
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
39.19
|
2018
|
Commonwealth Games
|
Gold Coast,
Australia
|
–
|
200 m
|
DQ
|
6th
|
110 m hurdles
|
13.53
|
5th
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
39.04
|
Central American and Caribbean Games
|
Barranquilla, Colombia
|
10th (sf)
|
200 m
|
20.96
|
1st
|
110 m hurdles
|
13.38
|
1st
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
38.41
|
NACAC Championships
|
Toronto, Canada
|
3rd
|
110 m hurdles
|
13.52
|
2019
|
Pan American Games
|
Lima, Peru
|
1st
|
110 m hurdles
|
13.31
|
World Championships
|
Doha, Qatar
|
6th
|
110 m hurdles
|
13.61
|
2021
|
Olympic Games
|
Tokyo, Japan
|
28th (h)
|
110 m hurdles
|
13.64
|
2022
|
World Championships
|
Eugene, United States
|
5th (sf)
|
110 m hurdles
|
13.211
|
Commonwealth Games
|
Birmingham, United Kingdom
|
2nd
|
110 m hurdles
|
13.30
|
NACAC Championships
|
Freeport, Bahamas
|
4th
|
110 m hurdles
|
13.42
|
2023
|
Central American and Caribbean Games
|
San Salvador, El Salvador
|
1st
|
110 m hurdles
|
13.64
|
1Disqualified in the final
References
External links
|
---|
- 1926:
Mexico (
Ahumada,
Gómez,
Ramírez,
Aguilar)
- 1930:
Cuba (
Torriente,
Rodríguez,
Alfonso,
Seino)
- 1935:
Cuba (
Rodríguez,
Acosta,
Torriente,
Verrier)
- 1938:
Puerto Rico (
Villodas,
Guerra,
Malavé,
Vázquez)
- 1946:
Panama (
Loney,
Thomas,
Clarke,
La Beach)
- 1950:
Cuba (
Fortún,
Farrés,
Mazorra,
Wilson)
- 1954:
Jamaica (
LaBeach,
Rhoden,
Gardner,
Laing)
- 1959:
Venezuela (
Bonas,
Murad,
Esteves,
Romero)
- 1962:
Venezuela (
Herrera,
Murad,
Romero,
Esteves)
- 1966:
Jamaica (
Clayton,
McNeil,
Headley,
Fray)
- 1970:
Cuba (
Ramírez,
Montes,
Morales,
Triana)
- 1974:
Cuba (
Triana,
Montes,
Bandomo,
Leonard)
- 1978:
Trinidad and Tobago (
Noel,
Crawford,
Husbands,
Serrette)
- 1982:
Cuba (
Lara,
Casañas,
Peñalver,
Saborit)
- 1986:
Cuba (
Lara,
Peñalver,
Querol,
Simón)
- 1990:
Cuba (
Simón,
Peñalver,
Stevens,
Isasi)
- 1993:
Cuba (
Simón,
I. García,
Isasi,
Aguilera)
- 1998:
Cuba (
A. García,
Ortiz,
I. García,
Pérez)
- 2002:
Dominican Republic (
Matos,
Morillo,
Sainfleur,
Báez)
- 2006:
Netherlands Antilles (
Mariano,
Kwidama,
Duzant,
Martina)
- 2010:
Trinidad and Tobago (
Sorrillo,
Burns,
Callender,
Bledman)
- 2014:
Cuba (
Ruíz,
Mena,
Luis,
Carrero)
- 2018:
Barbados (
Brathwaite,
Burke,
Ellis,
Hoyte)
- 2023:
Trinidad and Tobago (
Hosten,
Benjamin,
Harrison Jr.,
Augustine)
|