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Kayla Harrison

Kayla Harrison

Inducted 2015

Kayla Harrison made history at the 2012 Olympics in London by winning the first Gold Medal by any American (man or woman) in the history of the sport of judo. Her victory marks another step in a career characterized by success at the sport’s highest levels. Kayla’s judo career has been undeniably impressive. However, it is her perseverance through incredible personal struggles that is truly inspiring.

Kayla began judo at the age of 6. As a teenager, she quickly distinguished herself as one of the top junior players in the country. Among other national titles, she won the Junior U.S. Open in 2003, 2004 and 2005. She was a two-time US Senior National Champion before she turned 18 and she became only the third American to win the Junior World Championships in 2008. She won a Silver Medal at the Junior World Championships in 2009 and became Senior World Champion in 2010. She was only the fourth American ever to become World Champion. Since 2008 Kayla has been on a world podium every year.

Her competitive success masked an unimaginable personal struggle. At the age of 16, Kayla revealed the fact that she had been for years sexually abused by her coach. After the story came to light, Kayla moved from Ohio to Massachusetts to train with Jimmy Pedro, a two-time Olympic Bronze medalist and his father Jim Pedro, Sr. The Pedros became Kayla’s coaches but also her surrogate family. When she arrived in Massachusetts, she entertained suicide, was depressed, hated judo and wanted to run away. Through discipline, tenacity, and the support of others she fought through the pain both on and off the mat, transforming herself into a strong, confident, articulate young woman who happens to be a world-class athlete.

She also summoned the courage to face her abuser, delivering a victim impact statement at his sentencing hearing in Federal Court in Ohio. She intends to use her Gold Medal profile, voice, and example to encourage and empower others. She also plans to maintain her dominance on the mat by remaining a competitive Judo player with sights on defending her Gold Medal in Rio in 2016.

Kayla created the Fearless Foundation to shine a light on the darkness that is child sexual abuse and to enrich the lives of survivors through education and sport, leading survivors to mastery and enabling them to flourish in all aspects of life. She is a member of the Board of Directors of Doc Wayne, an organization that provides sports-based therapy for at-risk youth, and uses her voice on behalf of countless organizations dedicated to protecting children and women.

Kayla was awarded the 2012 OC Tanner Inspiration Award, The Women’s Sports Foundation’s Wilma Rudolph Courage Award; was named one of Glamour Magazine’s Women of the Year for 2012, Boston Globe Magazine’s Bostonian of the Year, and the Boston Sportswriter’s Association Athlete of the Year. She has been inducted into the New York Athletic Club Hall of Fame and the Middletown High School Hall of Fame.

photo © 2016 Chuck Medani

Kayla Harrison’s Career Highlights

2016

  • Olympic Champion

2014

  • Bronze – World Championships Chelyabinsk
  • Silver – Russia Grand Slam
  • Gold – Miami World Cup
  • Silver – El Salvador World Cup
  • Gold – Cuba Grand Prix

2013

  • Gold – Senior Nationals (-70kg)
  • Gold – World Cup Argentina (-70kg)
  • Silver – World Cup Uruguay (-70kg)
  • Bronze – Pan Am Championships (-70kg)

2012

  • Olympic Champion
  • Gold – Brazil Grand Slam
  • Gold – German Grand Prix
  • Gold – Hungary World Cup
  • Gold – Czech Open
  • Silver – Paris Grand Slam

2011

  • Gold – Pan-American Judo Championships

2010

  • Gold – Senior World Championships
  • Gold – USA World Cup
  • Gold – Sao Paulo World Cup
  • Gold – Venezuela World Cup
  • Gold – El Salvador World Cup
  • Gold – Birmingham World Cup
  • Gold – U.S. Open
  • Gold – USA Judo Senior National Championships
  • Silver – Uzbekistan World Cup
  • Bronze – Rotterdam Grand Prix
  • Bronze – Senior Pan American Championships
  • Bronze – Dusseldorf Grand Prix
  • Bronze – Warsaw World Cup
  • Fifth – Rio Grand Slam

2009

  • Gold – USA Judo Senior National Championships
  • Gold – USA Judo National Junior Olympic Championships (IJF-Junior, 78kg)
  • Silver – Junior World Championships
  • Bronze – Belo Horizonte World Cup

2008

  • Gold – Junior World Championships
  • Gold – USA Judo Senior National Championships
  • Gold – U.S. Olympic Team Trials for Judo
  • Gold – Fall Classic National Championships
  • Gold – Junior World Team Trials
  • Gold – U.S. Open
  • Gold – U.S. Open (Open)
  • Gold – USA Judo National Junior Olympic Championships (IJF-Junior, 78kg)

source: Kayla Harrison’s website

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