Linda Haglund
Linda Haglund was a Swedish Olympic sprinter.
Running career
Haglund became a member of Hanvikens SK, a track and field club located just south of Stockholm, at the age of 13. She showed great promise as a future sprinting star by recording, barefoot, 12.7 for 100 m at her first meet representing Hanvikens SK. Haglund's precocious talent was displayed on an international stage at the European Championships of 1971, held in Helsinki, Finland.She was named on the Swedish track and field team that competed in Helsinki that year. She was 15 at the time and acknowledged as the youngest athlete of the meet. One year later, Haglund was appointed to the first of three Swedish Olympic teams: Munich, 1972. Her running career would take her to the 1976 Montreal Olympic Games, as well as those held in Moscow in 1980. Haglund had her best Olympic Games' showing with a fourth place in the Moscow Games' 100 m final.
Haglund participated in the World Cups of 1979 and 1981 and was a five-time medalist at European Championships held in 1976, 1978, 1978, 1980, and 1981. Haglund was the captain for many years of the women's track and field team in Sweden and still holds Swedish records for 100 m - 11.16, 200 m - 22.82, and 60 m - 7.13. Haglund was one of very few sprinters to have beaten Evelyn Ashford. Haglund ran 11.06 to better Jarmila Kratochvílová's 11.18 and Ashford's 11.25 in a 1981 meet in Berlin. Haglund was ranked 3rd, 5th, and 7th in world rankings during her running career.
Career end
Haglund's running career was brought to an abrupt end in 1981 after a failed drug test. A Swedish board of adjudicators found Haglund innocent of charges but turned over their decision for further consideration to an international track and field tribunal assembled in Kingston, Jamaica, in 1982. This tribunal found against Haglund, who then retired.Legacy
Haglund was a member of the Swedish Sports Academy, and was awarded the Victoria Scholarship in 1981. She also belonged to the Legends of "1956", a sports fraternity of outstanding Swedish athletes born in 1956: Björn Borg, Ingemar Stenmark, Thomas Wassberg and Frank Andersson.After running
Inspired by the Russian artist Marc Chagall, Haglund was a painter and designer and had several exhibitions. She also authored a book on health and wellness, Lindas må bra bok, published by Prisma in 2007. Haglund was related to the Danish singer and actor Otto Brandenburg.Haglund was married to American sprinter Houston McTear from the 1980s until his death on 1 November 2015, aged 58.