Jessica Ennis-Hill – Keynote Speaker

British national record holder for the heptathlon, the indoor pentathlon, the high jump and the 100 metres hurdles. A member of the City of Sheffield Athletic Club, she is the current Olympic heptathlon champion.

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Jessica Ennis-Hill Profile Picture

Specialist Subjects

  • Motivation
  • Sports
  • Olympics

Language

  • English

Biography

Jessica Ennis-Hill, MBE is a retired British track and field athlete specialising in, multi-eventing disciplines and 100 metres hurdles. A member of the City of Sheffield Athletic Club, she is the current Olympic heptathlon champion. She is the current British national record holder for the heptathlon, the indoor pentathlon, the high jump and the 100 metres hurdles. She is also the former European and world heptathlon champion and the former world indoor pentathlon champion.

Recently, at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio she won the silver medal in the heptathlon competition.
In January, Jessica was voted as Great Britain’s favourite sporting hero.

Jessica competed at the 2003 World Youth Championships in Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada in July and the 2004 World Junior Championships in Grosseto, Italy, but it was her winning performance at the 2005 European Athletics Junior Championships in Kaunas, Lithuania that brought her to the fore. Her first senior championships was the 2005 Universiade, held in Turkey, where she won the bronze medal with a new personal best of 5,910 points.

One of Jessica’s first victories as a senior came in February 2004, when she was eighteen years old. She won the 60 metre hurdles at the Northern Senior Indoor Championships in a time of 8.60 seconds. Two weeks earlier she had won three Northern Junior Indoor Championship titles: the 60 metre sprint, the 60 metre hurdles and the high jump.

In her first outdoor competition of 2009, Jessica broke her personal best, scoring 6,587 points to win by 510 points in Desenzano del Garda. This was a fantastic performance after she was forced to miss the Olympic Games in Beijing with a stress fracture in her ankle. She finished off the event with a personal best in the 800m of 2 minutes 9.88 seconds. This performance moved her to third on the UK all-time lists of heptathletes, with a score only bettered by former Olympic and Commonwealth champion, Denise Lewis (6,831 points), and former Commonwealth champion, Judy Simpson (6,623 points).

Jessica went into the 2009 World Championships in Berlin as a resounding favourite, the only British athlete to go into their event as the number one in the world that year. The pressure of being the bookie’s favourite to win didn’t affect her performance. Jessica duly delivered the goods, leading from the first event through to the last and recording a life-time best of 6,731 points, exactly 100 points behind Denise Lewis’ UK record, which is surely on borrowed time. Her first day score has only been bettered by Jackie Joyner-Kersee and Carolina Kluft, the two top performing women heptathletes of all time. In total, over the season she recorded six personal bests in 100m, 800m, 100m hurdles, long jump, shot and javelin.

Jessica won the Olympic heptathlon gold medal at London Olympic 2012, the first for Britain on the track at the London Games. On her way to the gold medal she scored 6,955 points, that is her personal best career points as well as national record. She came 1st in 100m Hurdles, 200m and 800m Race. She came 2nd in Long Jump, 5th in High Jump, 9th in Shot Put, 10th in Javelin.

Ennis-Hill made her comeback in 2016 at the Great City Games in Manchester. She then finished fourth in her first heptathlon since the London Olympics at the Hypo-Meeting in Götzis, Austria, comfortably achieving the qualifying standard for the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games.

In September Ennis-Hill was nominated for the European Athlete of the Year award, in November Ennis-Hill won the Sunday Times and Sky Sports Sportswoman of the Year award for a second time, was voted BAWA Athlete of the Year for the fifth time and was nominated for IAAF Athlete of the Year. In December Ennis-Hill was selected as SJA Sportswoman of the Year for a joint-record fourth time and was voted the best British and International Female Athlete in 2015 by the Athletics Weekly readers. She also finished third in the 2015 BBC Sports Personality of the Year. It was the fourth time she was been voted in the top three of the award.

Jessica is a patron of the Sheffield Children’s Hospital charity and of businessman Barrie Wells’s sports foundation. She is also an Ambassador for the Jaguar Academy of Sport. She writes a column for The Times newspaper

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