Athletics-Rand, first British Olympic women's gold medallist, dies at age 86


March 27 (Reuters) - Former ⁠Olympic long jump champion Mary Rand, the ⁠first British woman to win three ‌medals at a single Olympic Games, has died at the age of 86.

Rand won gold in the long jump, ​silver in the pentathlon and ⁠bronze in the ⁠4x100 metres relay at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics.

"Team ⁠GB ‌is saddened to hear of the death of Olympic champion Mary Rand," ⁠UK Athletics said in a statement on ​Friday. "From a ‌young age, Rand was a trailblazer.

"She was ⁠just 17 ​when she set her first British record in the pentathlon, making her major championship debut a ⁠few weeks later, when she ​won long jump silver at the Commonwealth Games in Cardiff."

Rand set a long jump world record ⁠of 6.76 meters in Tokyo.

"Inspired by Rand's opening-day gold ... the squad went on to claim 12 medals in total," UK Athletics said. "If ​you talk to Ann Packer (Rand's ⁠roommate in Tokyo and Olympic champion in the ​800m), she will say, 'Mary ‌came back and she'd won ​a gold and it inspired everybody'."

(Reporting by Lori Ewing, editing by Ed Osmond)

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