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Birthday: October 15th, 1961
Hometown: Kenosha, WI
Current Residence: Kenosha, WI
College: Gateway Tech, University of Wisconsin, Parkside

PRs

Outdoors
10 km
- 44:42
20 km - 1:33:48

 

Not her best race, but favorite internationally was the 1992 Olympics. At the time, Mary Decker’s former coach, Dick Brown, coached her. The race plan was to go out hard with the leaders. While only able to walk with the lead pack for a short while, Lawrence felt exhilarated just to be there. Then she hit the wall and felt like dropping out. She couldn’t; her parents had purchased really expensive tickets in the stadium instead of watching the race for free on the road. As much as she wanted to quit, she didn’t. When she entered the stadium, the fans were cheering for her like she was in first place. Goosebumps came over Lawrence, who didn’t believe she deserved the cheers.

Lawrence learned two valuable lessons that day. Had she given in to the fatigue, she never would have experienced the joy of entering the stadium. She learned to never drop out of a race. While sticking her neck way out with the lead walkers didn’t pay off, she did learn the value of putting your neck out a little. Up until that point she felt she raced too conservatively. By shaking it up a little, she learned to be more aggressive.

It’s a shame race walking is not prominently featured indoors as in Lawrence’s day. It’s possible that Lawrence was too successful for race walking’s own good. In early Nineties the indoor track circuit had race walking as one of the events. Lawrence remembers how cool it was to be a competitor with Diane Dixon. That’s right, competitor. Competing in the Grand Prix, you were given points for placing in Grand Prix events as well as setting records. This cross competition was great for race walking. It really got our names out in front of other track and field fans. The first year they included it, Lawrence got really sick, but the last two years she won it. Won it all. She beat out the best runners in the world for a prize of $12,000 each year. A lot of people must have complained, because they dropped the race walk from the Grand Prix and then from other races as well. Lawrence enjoyed “taking lime light away from the runners.”

Late in her career, Lawrence learned another valuable lesson. One our younger walkers need to learn early. Going into the 1996 Olympic Trials, Lawrence was far from favored. The day was hot and humid, but Lawrence had a secret weapon: mental training. During 1995 and 1996, Lawrence trained her mind as well as her body. Lawrence says, “The power of the mind is amazing.” She learned that when you prepare the mind to race, you can do amazing things. She claims not to remember the heat and humidity by the end of the race. She does however remember making her third Olympic Team.

n between her busy racing schedule, Lawrence’s modelesque looks landed her on the cover of publications like Walking Magazine. She claims her best years are still coming, although Lawrence has difficultly balancing training with her busy career teaching clinics, giving teleclasses for walking over a 10-week period to people all over the world via the phone, as well as promoting healthy eating and fitness for children.

 

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