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・ Janet E. Mertz
・ Janet E. Minor
・ Janet E. Smith
・ Janet Echelman
・ Janet Ecker
・ Janet Eissenstat
・ Janet Elaine Paul
・ Janet Elizabeth Dyer
・ Janet Ellen Morgan
・ Janet Elliott Wulsin
・ Janet Ellis
・ Janet Ely
・ Janet Emerson Bashen
・ Janet Erskine Stuart
・ Janet Evanovich
Janet Evans
・ Janet Fairbank
・ Janet Farrar
・ Janet Feder
・ Janet Fielding
・ Janet Finch
・ Janet Finch-Saunders
・ Janet Fish
・ Janet Fitch
・ Janet Flanner
・ Janet Fletcher
・ Janet Fookes, Baroness Fookes
・ Janet Ford
・ Janet Fox
・ Janet Fox (author)


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Janet Evans : ウィキペディア英語版
Janet Evans

Janet Beth Evans (born August 28, 1971) is an American former competition swimmer who specialized in distance freestyle events. Evans was a world champion and world record-holder, and won a total of four gold medals at the 1988 and the 1992 Olympics.
==Biography==
Born in Fullerton, California, Evans grew up in neighboring Placentia, where she started swimming competitively as a child. By the age of 11, she was setting national age group records in distance events. After swimming as a teenager for Fullerton Aquatics (FAST Swimming) and graduating from El Dorado High School, Evans attended Stanford University, where she swam for the Stanford Cardinal swimming and diving team from 1989 to 1991. She received the Honda Sports Award for Swimming and Diving, recognizing her as the outstanding college female swimmer of the year in 1988–89.〔Collegiate Women Sports Awards, (Past Honda Sports Award Winners for Swimming & Diving ). Retrieved December 3, 2014.〕 When the NCAA placed weekly hours limits on athletic training time, she quit the Stanford swim team to focus on training. She later attended the University of Texas at Austin before graduating from the University of Southern California with a bachelor's degree in communications in 1994.
Evans was distinctive for her unorthodox "windmill" stroke and her apparently inexhaustible cardio-respiratory reserves. Slight of build and short of stature, she more than once found herself competing and winning against bigger and stronger athletes, some of whom were subsequently found to have been using performance-enhancing drugs.
Janet Evans was the 1989 recipient of the James E. Sullivan Award as the top amateur athlete in the United States. She was named the Female World Swimmer of the Year by ''Swimming World Magazine'' in 1987, 1989, and 1990.
After retiring from competitive swimming, Evans worked as a motivational speaker and corporate spokesperson for companies such as AT&T, Speedo, Campbell's, PowerBar, John Hancock, Cadillac, and Xerox. In 2008, Evans competed on the NBC show ''Celebrity Circus''.〔("Janet Evans Bio | The Grable Group" )〕
In 2010, Evans returned to competitive swimming in Masters swimming.
Evans married Bill Willson in 2004, with whom she has two children. As of June 2012, the family lives in Laguna Beach, California.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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