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Ebony Lane

Age

25

Place of Birth

Australia, VIC

Hometown

Echuca, VIC

Junior Club

Collingwood Little Aths

Senior Club

Mornington Peninsula

Coach

Christopher Dale

Olympic History

Paris 2024

High School

Mornington Secondary and Frankston High School

 

Ebony's Story

From a family of athletes (beach sprinters), Ebony Lane, started her own journey in athletics aged four. When they moved to the small Victorian country town of Echuca, sports were limited, but athletics was an option and there was also no beach to follow her parents sporting journey.

It would take until she was 16 for Ebony to make a state final and age 19 the nationals. She was a regular at the professional running gifts, making the 70m and 120m gifts finals at Stawell in 2018 and 2019. After this, she decided to focus on track, rather than the gifts.

There was clear progression when in early 2020 she ran PBs of 11.80 (100m) and 24.67 (200m).

Then the pandemic closed down the world. During the lockdown in 2020 Ebony was working in childcare and was unable to join her training squad. Her busy job kept life very normal for Ebony and she focused on becoming mentally healthy and really finding the reason behind not only training hard but setting goals, eating well, thinking positive and celebrating the small successes.

Mid-pandemic, in the summer of 2021, the results of this approach were evident. She broke the Victorian 100 yards record with a time of 10.59, then in February ran 11.48, a 0.32 seconds PB, then 11.39 in March.

After a best of 11.52 in 2022, her 2023 campaign may not have produced a PB, but she has made progress with her consistency of marks highlighted by a best of 11.41 and fourth at nationals. In July 2023 she joined the national relay team to compete in front of 50,000 spectators at the London Diamond League where the relay ran 43.46. In August she was named in the relay team for the 2023 World Championships – her Australian debut. In Budapest unfortunately the relay team dropped the baton, however the team ran well at a few Diamond Leagues Meets.

Domestically in 2024 she set two PBs, 11.33, then 11.30 and a wind assisted 11.27. She also won bronze in the 100m at nationals. But it was the relay where she had significant impact. As the lead off runner, she helped the team set two national records in the 4x100m, first breaking the record in March in Sydney (42.94), then at the World Relays in May (42.83) where the team qualified for the Paris Olympics.

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