Laura Muir

Laura Muir
Muir after her 3000 m win at the 2017 European Indoor Championships in Belgrade
Personal information
Born (1993-05-09) 9 May 1993 (age 31)
Inverness, Scotland, United Kingdom
EducationUniversity of Glasgow (2018)
Height1.63 m (5 ft 4 in)
Weight49 kg (108 lb)
Sport
CountryGreat Britain & N.I.
Scotland
SportAthletics
Event(s)Middle-, Long-distance running
ClubDundee Hawkhill Harriers & Glasgow University
Nike
Coached byAndy Young (2011–2023)
Alan Mackintosh (–2011)
Achievements and titles
Olympic finals
  • 2016 Rio de Janeiro
  • 1500 m, 7th
  • 2020 Tokyo
  • 1500 m,  Silver
World finals
  • 2013 Moscow
  • 800 m, 9th (sf)
  • 2015 Beijing
  • 1500 m, 5th
  • 2017 London
  • 1500 m, 4th
  • 5000 m, 6th
  • 2019 Doha
  • 1500 m, 5th
  • 2022 Eugene
  • 1500 m,  Bronze
  • 2023 Budapest
  • 1500 m, 6th
Personal bests

Laura Muir (/mjʊər/; born 9 May 1993)[1][2] is a Scottish middle- and long-distance runner. She is the 2020 Tokyo Olympic silver medallist in the 1500 metres, having previously finished seventh in the event at the 2016 Rio Olympics.[3] Muir won the bronze medal at the 2022 World Championships, and has three other top five placings in 1500 m finals at the World Athletics Championships, finishing fifth in 2015, fourth in 2017 (where she was also sixth in the 5000 metres) and fifth in 2019. She is a two-time European 1500 m champion from 2018 and 2022 as well as the 2022 Commonwealth Games 1500 m champion and 800 metres bronze medallist.[4] Muir is twice the Diamond League champion over 1500 metres, in 2016 and 2018.

Indoors, she is a two-time 2018 World Indoor Championship medallist, earning silver at 1500 m and bronze at 3000 metres, and a British record five-time European Indoor champion, including the 1500 m/3000 m double in 2017 and 2019 as the first athlete in history to achieve the "double-double" at a European Indoor Championships. With Muir's fifth title for the 1500 m in 2023, she became the first ever Brit to claim five golds at the event, increasing her overall tally to seven European titles.[5]

Muir first broke the British record in the 1500 metres in July 2016. She set her last record in 2024 in a Diamond League meeting in Paris, which ranks her in the world all-time top 15, before the record was brooken in the Olympic final by Georgia Bell. In 2017, she broke the European indoor records at both the 1000 metres and 3000 metres, and also set a British record for the indoor 5000 metres. Muir added a British record at the 1000 m in 2020, and the next year, she also broke the Scottish record in the 800 metres. Her British record time for the Mile run in 2023, ranks her in the world all-time top 10.

She is also a multiple British champion.

  1. ^ Laura Muir Archived 5 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine. ScotStats. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
  2. ^ "Athlete Profile - Laura Muir". Power of 10.
  3. ^ Bloom, Ben (6 August 2021). "Laura Muir wins Olympic 1,500m silver with gutsy run to end string of near misses". The Daily Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 6 August 2021.
  4. ^ Bloom, Ben (24 December 2021). "Olympic silver medallist Laura Muir: 'Hopefully I'll be one of those crazy people running marathons when they are 80'". The Daily Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  5. ^ Wilson, Jeremy (4 March 2023). "Laura Muir breaks new ground with fifth European Indoor gold". The Daily Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 4 March 2023.

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