Dame Yvette Winifred CorlettDNZMMBE (née Williams; 25 April 1929 – 13 April 2019) was a New Zealand track-and-field athlete who was the first woman from her country to win an Olympic gold medal and to hold the world record in the women's long jump. Williams was named "Athlete of the Century" on the 100th anniversary of Athletics New Zealand, in 1987.[1]
Early life
Williams was born on 25 April 1929 in Dunedin.[4] She grew up there and attended Otago Girls' High School.[5] While at high school, Williams played several sports, making the top netball team and playing for Otago and the South Island.[4] Williams also represented Otago, the South Island and New Zealand (1950, 1953–55) in basketball.[5][6]
Athletics career
Williams joined the Otago Athletic Club in early 1947, mainly for social reasons.[2] Two months later, she came to national attention when she won the shot put at the New Zealand athletics championships.[7] She went on to win 21 national titles across 5 disciplines: shot put (1947–54), javelin (1950), discus (1951–54), long jump (1948–54) and the 80 m hurdles (1954). With 21 New Zealand titles, she is the joint second-most successful New Zealand female athlete at that level, with Beatrice Faumuina and Melissa Moon, behind Val Young (35 titles).[8]
Jim Bellwood, who had moved to Dunedin in late 1947 or early 1948, became her trainer. When Bellwood moved to Auckland in 1952 to teach at Avondale College,[9] Williams followed, boarding with an aunt and uncle in Devonport.[5]
Controversially left out of the New Zealand team for the 1948 Olympic Games in London,[2] Williams won the long jump title at the 1950 British Empire Games in Auckland.[10] Her winning leap of 19 feet 4+5⁄8 inches (5.91 m)[11] broke the national, Empire Games, and British Empire records.[12] At the same competition, she also won the silver medal in the women's javelin,[7] with a throw of 124 feet 6+3⁄4 inches (37.97 m).[13]
In 1951 Williams jumped 20 feet 1+3⁄8 inches (6.13 m) at a meet in Melbourne,[2] the third-best distance ever by a woman at that time, increased her New Zealand shot put record, and also became the New Zealand discus record holder.[12]
At the 1952 New Zealand championships, Williams became the first woman in history to jump over 20 feet (6.10 m) more than once, winning the long jump title with a distance of 20 feet 7+3⁄4 inches (6.29 m), but the distance was not recognised as a world record as it was wind-assisted.[12] Also in 1952 she recorded a score of 4219 points in the pentathlon, setting a New Zealand record that stood for 10 years.[12]
Williams won the gold medal in the long jump at the 1952 Olympics in Helsinki;[7] her winning distance of 6.24 m was a new Olympic record and 1 cm short of Fanny Blankers-Koen's world record set in 1943. Also at Helsinki, Williams finished in sixth place in the shot put and 10th in the discus throw.[12]
In February 1954, Williams broke the women's long jump world record at Gisborne, New Zealand, with a leap of 6.28 metres.[10] Later that year she travelled to Vancouver for the 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games, winning gold medals in the long jump, discus, and shot put,[10] all with Empire Games record performances,[12] and finishing sixth in the 80 m hurdles.[7] She announced her retirement from athletic competition in November 1954.[14] At the time she ranked number one in world track and field history in the long jump, fifth in the pentathlon, 12th in the discus throw and 19th in the shot put.[12]
Personal life
Williams married Buddy Corlett, a member of the national basketball team, in Auckland on 11 December 1954.[10][15] The couple had four children, including national basketball representative Neville Corlett; Auckland provincial rugby union player Peter Corlett, and Karen Corlett, who represented New Zealand in rhythmic gymnastics at the 1977 world championships.[16]
She was inducted into the New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame in 1990.[20] In 2000, she was voted Otago Sportsperson of the Century.[21] Sports writer Peter Heidenstrom, author of the book Athletes of the Century, rates her as New Zealand's top athlete of the 20th century.[5]
The "Yvette Williams Retirement Village" in the Dunedin suburb of Roslyn is named in her honour.[22] In 2013, the New Zealand Olympic Committee, in association with the Glenn Family Foundation, established the Yvette Williams Scholarship, to assist young athletes displaying both exceptional talent and need.[23]
^ abcdefgMcLintock, A.H., ed. (1966). "Olympiads and Empire Games". An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 9 February 2015.