Anne-Marie Colchen-Maillet (8 December 1925 – 26 January 2017) was a French
track and field
Track and field is a sport that includes athletic contests based on running, jumping, and throwing skills. The name is derived from where the sport takes place, a running track and a grass field for the throwing and some of the jumping eve ...
athlete and
women's basketball
Women's basketball is the team sport of basketball played by women. It began being played in 1892, one year after men's basketball, at Smith College in Massachusetts. It spread across the United States, in large part via women's college compet ...
player. She became France's first high jump champion at the
1946 European Athletics Championships
The 3rd European Athletics Championships were held from 22 August to 25 August 1946 in the Bislett Stadion in Oslo, Norway. For the first time it was a combined event for men and women, and for the first time a city in Scandinavia hosted the champ ...
and held the
French record for the event for ten years. She represented France in high jump at the
1948 Summer Olympics. In basketball she was the highest scorer at the
1953 FIBA World Championship for Women, helping France to third place. She was a member of the French national team for the
European Women's Basketball Championship
EuroBasket Women is a biennial international women's basketball competition held between the nations of FIBA Europe for women's national teams. EuroBasket Women is also used as a qualifying tournament for the FIBA Women's World Cup and also the ...
in 1950, 1952, 1954 and 1956.
Career
Born in
Le Havre
Le Havre (, ; nrf, Lé Hâvre ) is a port city in the Seine-Maritime department in the Normandy region of northern France. It is situated on the right bank of the estuary of the river Seine on the Channel southwest of the Pays de Caux, ver ...
, she joined up with the local sports club, the
Association Sportive Augustin Normand (ASAN).
Standing at a height of – unusually tall for a woman in that era – she found she had a natural talent for
high jump and
basketball
Basketball is a team sport in which two teams, most commonly of five players each, opposing one another on a rectangular court, compete with the primary objective of shooting a basketball (approximately in diameter) through the defender's h ...
.
Athletics
Colchen first emerged as a high jumper in the mid-1940s and she ranked in the world's top twenty in 1944, clearing .
[Anne-Marie Colchen]
Track and Field Brinkster. Retrieved on 2015-11-01. She rose to the peak of the international scene with a gold medal win at the
1946 European Athletics Championships
The 3rd European Athletics Championships were held from 22 August to 25 August 1946 in the Bislett Stadion in Oslo, Norway. For the first time it was a combined event for men and women, and for the first time a city in Scandinavia hosted the champ ...
, holding off the Soviet all-round athlete
Aleksandra Chudina with her winning height of . As of 2015, Colchen remains the only French woman to win a European high jump title (
Jacques Madubost won the men's event in 1966). She followed this with a silver medal in the
4×100 metres relay, running alongside her compatriots
Léa Caurla Léa may refer to:
People with the given name Léa
* Princess Léa of Belgium (born Léa Inga Dora Wolman; 1951), the widow of Prince Alexandre of Belgium and aunt of King Philippe of Belgium
* Léa Bouard (born 1996), German freestyle skier
*Léa ...
,
Claire Brésolles and
Monique Drilhon to finish behind a
Fanny Blankers-Koen
Francina "Fanny" Elsje Blankers-Koen (26 April 1918 – 25 January 2004) was a Dutch track and field athlete, best known for winning four gold medals at the 1948 Summer Olympics in London. She competed there as a 30-year-old mother of two, ear ...
-led Dutch team.
Colchen made two further appearances in major international athletics competitions: she was selected for
France at the 1948 Summer Olympics, where her jump of was only enough for 14th at the
Games in London, and attempted to defend her title at the
1950 European Athletics Championships, ultimately finishing sixth with her best clearance of .
[ Over the course of her career Colchen was a four-time national champion at the ]French Athletics Championships
The French Athletics Championships (french: Championnats de France d'athlétisme) is an annual outdoor track and field competition organised by the Fédération française d'athlétisme (FFA; French Athletics Federation), which serves as the Frenc ...
, winning straight titles from 1946 to 1950, with the exception of 1947 when Micheline Ostermeyer was the victor. She broke he French record for the high jump in 1949 with her lifetime best clearance of . This mark stood for ten years, at which point Florence Pétry-Amiel added an additional centimetre to the national standard. She made eleven international appearances for France in athletics, spanning 1946 to 1955.
Basketball
Although Colchen's high jump and basketball career coincided, it look her a little longer to reach the same heights in basketball. Playing as a centre
Center or centre may refer to:
Mathematics
*Center (geometry), the middle of an object
* Center (algebra), used in various contexts
** Center (group theory)
** Center (ring theory)
* Graph center, the set of all vertices of minimum eccentricit ...
, she made her international debut for the French basketball team in February 1946, appearing against Belgium.[Anne Marie COLCHEN-MAILLET]
. Internationaux Basket. Retrieved on 2015-11-01. In her first major tournament appearance at the 1950 FIBA European Women's Basketball Championship
The 1950 European Championship for Women was the 2nd regional championship held by FIBA Europe for women. The competition was held in Budapest, Hungary and took place May 14–20, 1950. The Soviet Union won the gold medal, with Hungary and Czechos ...
she was France's leading points scorer in two of their group games and two games in the final group stage (amassing 25 against Italy) in their last game. The team finished fourth overall, with Colchen averaging 14.5 points per game. At 87 in total, she was the tournament's leader on points. She returned for the 1952 European Championship but played a smaller role, appearing in only two games, but still being the team's third-highest scorer. France finished seventh that year.
Colchen reached the peak of her basketball career at the 1953 FIBA World Championship for Women. It was the first time that a world tournament for women had been held. Colchen was by far and away the leading points scorer at the competition having a points per game average of 19.2 and a total of 115 points (over thirty more than the next best, Onésima Reyes of Chile). She was France's leading scorer in four of their six games. A loss to Chile in the final round meant the French women came third overall, taking the bronze medal behind the host nation and the American winners.[
She made two more appearances at the European Championships after her world medal. The 1954 event saw France beat Austria and Italy to qualify for the final round, but they performed poorly once there, losing all five games to bottom the group in sixth. She returned to the squad for the 1956 edition and was France's top scorer in the first game (a loss to Hungary). Strong performances by Édith Tavert-Kloechner led France to wins over Germany and Romania. The pair again led the scoring for France in the semi-round, but heavy losses to Bulgaria and the hosts Czechoslovakia saw them eliminated from the tournament. Over the course of her international basketball career, she earned 66 selections, scored 455 points and managed a record high of 30 points in a single game. Her last international game was against Austria at the 1956 European Championships.][
]
Later life
After retiring from active competition she went into coaching.[Présidence de la République Ordre national de la Légion d'honneur]
France Phaleristique. Retrieved on 2015-11-01. Colchen was inducted into the Gloire du sport
The Gloire du sport (French: Glory of Sport) is an award that is given to former athletes, sports leaders, sports coaches and sports journalists, who have greatly contributed to sports in the country of France. The award is given by the Fédérati ...
(the French national sports hall of fame) in 2002, being only the third inductee for basketball and the first of those to be a woman. She was admitted to the Académie du Basket in 2005, featuring in the second year of admission and the second woman entrant after Jacky Chazalon
Jacky Chazalon (born 24 March 1945) is a retired French FIBA basketball player. Chazalon played for the France women's national basketball team from 1963 to 1976 and won silver at the EuroBasket Women 1970 Championship. During her time in FIBA, sh ...
.Académie du Basket
French Basketball Federation. Retrieved on 2015-11-01. She was honoured as Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur
The National Order of the Legion of Honour (french: Ordre national de la Légion d'honneur), formerly the Royal Order of the Legion of Honour ('), is the highest French order of merit, both military and civil. Established in 1802 by Napoleon B ...
in 2009 in respect of her achievements and 65-year-long dedication to sports in France.[ Among her other honours are the Médaille d'or de l'Education Physique (1945) and the Palme académique des Chevaliers du Mérite sportif.][
]
National titles
* French Athletics Championships
The French Athletics Championships (french: Championnats de France d'athlétisme) is an annual outdoor track and field competition organised by the Fédération française d'athlétisme (FFA; French Athletics Federation), which serves as the Frenc ...
** High jump: 1946, 1948, 1949, 1950
* French Basketball Championships
** Club: 1950, 1951, 1952[Anne Marie COLCHEN-MAILLET Palmares]
. Internationaux Basket. Retrieved on 2015-11-01.
International competitions
Athletics
Basketball
See also
*
References
External links
*
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Colchen, Anne-Marie
2017 deaths
1925 births
Sportspeople from Le Havre
French female high jumpers
French female sprinters
French women's basketball players
Centers (basketball)
French sports coaches
Female sports coaches
European Athletics Championships medalists
Chevaliers of the Légion d'honneur
Olympic athletes of France
Athletes (track and field) at the 1948 Summer Olympics