Julien Alfred

Athlete

Birthday June 10, 2001

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Ciceron, Castries, Saint Lucia

Age 22 years old

Nationality Saint Lucia

Height 168 cm

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1993

With "the greatest ever one day sprint double", she missed Irina Privalova's 60 m world record from 1993 by two hundredths of a second but equalled Aleia Hobbs' North American record.

In the 200 m, only Merlene Ottey’s 21.87 s dating back also to 1993 had been faster.

Julien went on to compete in the women's 100m race at the Istvan Gyulai Memorial, crossing the finish line with a time of 10.89 seconds, resulting in a victory over American sprinter Sha'Carri Richardson.

After the end of the 2022–23 academic year, Alfred and TCU football star Max Duggan were named as Big 12 Conference Athletes of the Year.

Selected for the 2023 World Athletics Championships in Budapest, she qualified for the final of the 100 metres and finished in fifth place.

She also competed in the 200 metres at the Championships, and qualified for the finals and finished 4th.

She won gold in the women's 60 metres at the 2024 World Athletics Indoor Championships in Glasgow, with a world leading time of 6.98 seconds.

It was Saint Lucia's first ever World Athletics Indoor Championship medal.

2001

Julien Alfred (born 10 June 2001) is a Saint Lucian sprinter.

She won the gold medal in the 60 metres at the 2024 World Athletics Indoor Championships.

She was a silver medalist in the 100 metres at the 2022 Commonwealth Games.

Alfred is the joint North American indoor record holder for the 60 metres.

She was the first woman in NCAA to break the seven-second barrier over the 60 m. Alfred is a three-time individual NCAA Division I champion.

2013

Born in the south Castries community of Ciceron, Julien Alfred attended Leon Hess Comprehensive Secondary School in Saint Lucia (2013–15), and St. Catherine High School in Jamaica (2015-2018).

She then pursued a bachelor's degree in Youth & Community Studies at the University of Texas.

2015

Alfred was a Central American and Caribbean U15 champion in 2015.

2017

Both that year and in 2017, she was recognised as Saint Lucia’s Junior Sportswoman of the Year.

As a junior athlete, she was the Commonwealth Youth Games 100 m champion in 2017, when the Games were held in Nassau, Bahamas.

2018

She also captured silver in the 2018 Youth Olympic Games in Buenos Aires, Argentina behind Nigeria’s Rosemary Chukwuma.

In 2022, Alfred had the all-time best NCAA performance in the 60 m at the NCAA Division I Indoor Championships, running a fast 7.04 s in the heats.

Then at the age of 21, she became one of the top 30 fastest women ever.

Her run of 10.81 s (+1.7 m/s) in preliminaries of the women’s 100 m at the Big 12 Conference Championships in Lubbock, Texas on 14 May was a Saint Lucia national and championship record.

It also marked her as the fastest woman ever from the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States.

At the time, only six Caribbean women had ever run faster, and in the NACAC region 17.

The same month, she ran a wind-aided 10.80 s (+2.2 m/s) at the NCAA West Preliminary Round - the fastest time ever recorded under any conditions at the event.

She won the 2022 NCAA Division I 100 m/m title in 11.02 s (+0.2 m/s) the day after her 21st birthday, completing an unbeaten collegiate season in that event.

Running for the University of Texas, she became the first track athlete from Saint Lucia to win a Division I championship, and just the second Saint Lucian overall, after high jumper Jeanelle Scheper.

She next went on to win her event at the inaugural Caribbean Games in Les Abymes, Guadeloupe in a time of 11.07 seconds (-0.2 m/s).

2024 She has made it in the finals of the World indoor athletics still representing Saint Lucia.

On 25 February 2023, Alfred broke for the fourth time existing collegiate record and became the first woman in NCAA to ever dip under 7 seconds over the 60 metres with a time of 6.97 s at the Big 12 Indoor Championships in Lubbock, TX.

Her time moved her up to eighth on the world all-time list.

She also achieved the second-fastest all-time collegian mark in the 200 m of 22.26 s, behind only Abby Steiner, to become the fourth-fastest woman of all time.

On March 11 at the NCCA Indoors in Albuquerque, New Mexico (at altitude), Alfred improved at both these events with times of 6.94 s and 22.01 s respectively to take both titles and move to second on both respective world all-time lists.