Hall of Famer
Debbie Brill
Inducted in 2024
Member Details
Date of Birth: March 10, 1953
Place of Birth: Mission, British Columbia
Sport: Athletics
Member Category: Trailblazer
Career Highlights
1969-1982
Consistently held the Canadian High Jump record (1982 – 1.99m)
1970, 1982
Gold Medal, Commonwealth Games
1971
Gold Medal, Pan American Games
1978
Silver Medal, Commonwealth Games
1979
Gold Medal, Amateur Athletic Federation World Cup
Bronze Medal, Pan American Games
Bronze Medal, Pan American Games
1982
Inducted into the Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame
1983
Officer of the Order of Canada
1989
Inducted into the BC Sports Hall of Fame
1999
Broke the World Master’s record for athletes over 45 years of age (1.76m)
2004
Set a new World Master’s record for athletes over 50 (1.60m)
2011
Inducted into the Athletics Canada Hall of Fame
2012
Recipient of the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal
2016
Inducted into the Canadian Masters Hall of Fame
Story
Growing up in the tall forests and lush valleys of British Columbia’s lower mainland, Debbie Brill was always challenging herself to run faster and jump higher as a young athlete. Born in 1953 in Mission, Debbie was dominating the high jump in local sporting events by the time she was nine. Encouraged by her parents, who created homemade landing mats using fishnets and foam from a second-hand furniture store, she spent hours practicing on their farm. Developing a unique reverse jump technique that became known as the ‘Brill Bend,’ Debbie would approach the bar directly from the side and fling herself backwards up and over, landing on her back. Competing internationally for the first time, just ahead of the Olympic Games in 1968, at the age of 15, she was laughed at by crowds who had never seen the high jump performed this way. Undaunted, Debbie’s self-confidence grew as she refined her technique, and at the age of 16 she became the first North American woman to clear six feet. With similar approaches developed independently by American athletes Dick Fosbury and Bruce Quande, Debbie redefined what athletes could achieve in the high jump.
An 11-time national champion, Debbie broke the Canadian record in 1969 and has held the record consecutively since 1976, setting the current record of 1.98 metres in 1984, a record that stands to this day. Between 1968 and 1988, she represented Canada at three Olympic Games, two World Championships, four Commonwealth Games, and three Pan American Games. Achieving an outstanding combined total of 65 national and international championships, Debbie won Gold Medals at the Commonwealth Games in 1970 and 1982, the Pan American Games in 1971, and the International Amateur Athletic Federation (IAAF) World Cup in 1979. Ranked number one in the world when Canada joined an international boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games to protest the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, she lost the chance to compete for an Olympic medal at the height of her career. With characteristic integrity and intelligence, Debbie continued to challenge limiting assumptions about women in athletics every time she approached the bar, clearing 1.99 metres to set the world indoor high jump record in 1982, five months after giving birth to her first child. She did this at a time when there was no information or precedence about how to return to high level competition after childbirth; women simply did not do it. Childbirth meant the end of one’s career. A notion she felt required challenging.
Retiring from competition in 1988, Debbie never stopped looking for new opportunities to challenge herself. In 1999 she broke the World Master’s record for athletes over 45 years of age after jumping 1.76 metres, and in 2004 cleared 1.60 metres to set a new World Master’s record for athletes over 50. A lifelong advocate for gender equity and inclusivity in sport, Debbie worked as an athlete representative to help successfully campaign for the removal of women’s sex testing from IAAF competition in 1992. She has also served as a member of the Board of Directors for the BC Games Society, drawing on her experience as a homegrown sport hero to support aspiring young athletes in her home province. A bold innovator who defied convention to achieve unprecedented heights, Debbie Brill remains a Canadian sport trailblazer in a class of her own.
An 11-time national champion, Debbie broke the Canadian record in 1969 and has held the record consecutively since 1976, setting the current record of 1.98 metres in 1984, a record that stands to this day. Between 1968 and 1988, she represented Canada at three Olympic Games, two World Championships, four Commonwealth Games, and three Pan American Games. Achieving an outstanding combined total of 65 national and international championships, Debbie won Gold Medals at the Commonwealth Games in 1970 and 1982, the Pan American Games in 1971, and the International Amateur Athletic Federation (IAAF) World Cup in 1979. Ranked number one in the world when Canada joined an international boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games to protest the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, she lost the chance to compete for an Olympic medal at the height of her career. With characteristic integrity and intelligence, Debbie continued to challenge limiting assumptions about women in athletics every time she approached the bar, clearing 1.99 metres to set the world indoor high jump record in 1982, five months after giving birth to her first child. She did this at a time when there was no information or precedence about how to return to high level competition after childbirth; women simply did not do it. Childbirth meant the end of one’s career. A notion she felt required challenging.
Retiring from competition in 1988, Debbie never stopped looking for new opportunities to challenge herself. In 1999 she broke the World Master’s record for athletes over 45 years of age after jumping 1.76 metres, and in 2004 cleared 1.60 metres to set a new World Master’s record for athletes over 50. A lifelong advocate for gender equity and inclusivity in sport, Debbie worked as an athlete representative to help successfully campaign for the removal of women’s sex testing from IAAF competition in 1992. She has also served as a member of the Board of Directors for the BC Games Society, drawing on her experience as a homegrown sport hero to support aspiring young athletes in her home province. A bold innovator who defied convention to achieve unprecedented heights, Debbie Brill remains a Canadian sport trailblazer in a class of her own.