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Kaillie Humphries

Canadian American bobsled pilot
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Also known as: Kaillie Simundson
Née:
Kaillie Simundson
Born:
September 4, 1985, Calgary, Alberta, Canada (age 38)
Awards And Honors:
Winter Olympic Games

Kaillie Humphries (born September 4, 1985, Calgary, Alberta, Canada) Canadian American bobsled pilot who, with her brakewoman partner Heather Moyse, was the first Canadian to win an Olympic gold medal in the women’s bobsled event; they won in 2010 and 2014.

Simundson grew up in western Canada, and her sporting aspirations were initially focused on Alpine skiing. When she was 16 years old, she switched to the bobsled and began training as a pilot, but after two weeks she crashed, breaking her collarbone. After recovering from her injury, she resumed bobsled training as a brakewoman, a position she continued in for the next four years as she gained skill and experience. It was as a brakewoman that she qualified as an alternate for the Canadian bobsleigh team heading to the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. She was not selected to compete during the Games, however, and afterward she made the decision to take up piloting once again. The next year she married British bobsledder Dan Humphries, who switched his allegiance to the Canadian team; the couple divorced in 2014.

Once her decision had been made to train as a pilot, Humphries quickly racked up an impressive string of wins on the Europa Cup circuit. In the following years she continued to perform well, medaling in several competitions. Humphries finished second in the 2009–10 World Cup season overall rankings, providing momentum as she entered the 2010 Vancouver Olympics. There she steered her way to gold with Moyse. Over the following two seasons, however, Humphries struggled, placing third and fifth in the World Cup overall rankings. She rebounded during the 2012–13 World Cup season, becoming the first Canadian woman to finish first overall. She repeated her overall victory the following year, winning the 2013–14 World Cup season title and cementing her status as the favourite in the 2014 Sochi (Russia) Games.

The efforts of Humphries and Moyse to defend their 2010 Olympic gold medal performance were inspired. The duo struggled on the first two of the four bobsleigh runs, which left them in second place. However, they rallied and had the fastest times in the third and fourth runs. In the end, Humphries’s piloting skills prevailed, and she and Moyse managed to win the gold by 0.1 second. Humphries’s success continued during the 2015–16 World Cup season as she won her third overall title.

Humphries also made history in 2014, when she and Elana Meyers Taylor became the first women to compete against men in an international four-man bobsled event; they were on different teams, each of which included three men. Two years later Humphries was on an all-female team that raced against men in a World Cup event; her team finished last.

Humphries joined with a new brakewoman, Olympic sprinter Phylicia George, for the 2018 Winter Olympics in P’yŏngch’ang, South Korea, where the pair won a bronze medal. Shortly thereafter Humphries filed a complaint with Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton (BCS) alleging verbal and mental abuse by her coach. A subsequent investigation, however, was unable to substantiate her claims. During this time she sued to leave the BCS in order to compete on the U.S. national team, and in 2019 her request was granted. In 2021 she became a U.S. citizen, and at the following year’s Beijing Olympics Humphries won a gold medal in the monobob.

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Amy McKenna The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica