Olympic Gold Medalist Benita Fitzgerald Mosley to Speak at the Falk College Convocation May 10
Olympic gold medalist and visionary executive says it has been her lifelong mission to help people win gold medals in businessâand in life.
âMy gold medal is the gift that keeps on giving,â Fitzgerald Mosley says. âI am forever grateful, so I want to pay that gift forward.â
To get there, Fitzgerald Mosley highlights five âOlympic ringsâ to help people achieve their goals: Have a good start, set high goals, run your own race, power through hurdles and have a strong finish.
âYou have to ask yourself, why not me?ââ Fitzgerald Mosley says. âWhy canât I be the best in the world at what I do?â
From becoming the first African American woman to win the 100-meter hurdles at the 1984 Olympics to her current role as chief executive officer of Multiplying Good, Fitzgerald Mosley has persistently broken barriers and advanced the idea that sport has the power to inspire and change the world.
Her enormous impact as a results-oriented leader in the Olympic, non-profit, and corporate worlds is why Dean asked Fitzgerald Mosley to be the keynote speaker at the Convocation at 12:30 p.m. May 10 in the John A. Lally Athletics Complex.
âBenitaâs âwhy not me?â message encourages us to challenge societal expectations and embrace our potential, while Multiplying Good is helping people bring about positive change and inspiring them to do more,â Jordan says. âThe life lessons and insights that Benita will share May 10 will provide valuable inspiration to our graduates and all of us.â
Using Fitzgerald Mosleyâs five Olympic rings, here is her remarkable story:
Have A Good Start
Fitzgerald Mosley often uses a quote from former American politician and motivational speaker Les Brown, who said, âYou donât have to be great to get started, but you have to get started to be great.â

Fitzgerald Mosleyâs parents, Fannie and Rodger Fitzgerald, were both educators and they encouraged Fitzgerald Mosley to get started in as many extracurricular activities as possible in their hometown of Dale City, Virginia. By participating in gymnastics, softball, majorettes and track, and learning the piano, violin, flute and piccolo, Fitzgerald Mosley discovered what she loved and was good at and where to focus her attention.
âThey were very supportive and stood by me in every aspect of my life,â Fitzgerald Mosley says of her parents. âThey celebrated my every achievement, large and small, and I loved to make them proud.â
While she became the first chair flute for the Gar-Field High School symphonic band, Fitzgerald Mosley says she wasnât very good at softball and grew too tall to be a gymnast. But middle school physical education teacher, family friend and gymnastics coach Gwen Washington was also the coach of the track team and when it became obvious that Fitzgerald Mosley had outgrown gymnastics, Washington suggested she join the track team because she had seen Fitzgerald Mosley outrun the boys in gym classes.
âSo I went out for the track team and started winning races from the very beginning,â Fitzgerald Mosley says. âIt wasnât until I was 12 years old and in the seventh grade that I even discovered my athletic prowess.â
Set High Goals
As a high school freshman sprinter and hurdler, Fitzgerald Mosley helped the track team win its fourth consecutive Virginia state championship. She was a teammate of senior Paula Girven, who represented the United States in the high jump in the 1976 Olympics and qualified for the team in 1980. Their high school track coach, Anne Locket, also led the girlâs gymnastics and basketball teams to state championships.

âCoach Locket said to me, âYou know, you can be an Olympian someday just like Paula,â and I looked at her like she was from Mars,â Fitzgerald Mosley says, smiling. âBut having a coach believe in you and say that to a youngster at 14 years old, it set me up for great things to come.â
By 1980, Fitzgerald Mosley was 18 and already a track starâand an industrial engineering majorâat the University of Tennessee, where she would become a 14-time All-American and four-time NCAA hurdles champion. Like Girven, she made the 1980 Olympic team but didnât participate because the United States led a boycott of the 1980 Summer Games in Moscow to protest the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
Fortunately for Fitzgerald Mosley, she was still in college and had the benefit of having access to coaching, training equipment and the highest level of competition in college. This was a time when Olympic athletes were strictly amateurs who couldnât make money off their athletic achievements, and many athletes who qualified for the 1980 Games, like Girven, werenât able to return for the 1984 Games.
âAt that point, people didnât have these long careers spanning three and four and five Olympic Games that started with my generation because they started to allow us to make money while we were competing,â Fitzgerald Mosley says. âThe two other hurdlers that were on the Olympic team with me in 1980 didnât make it again in 1984, so that was their one and only chance to be an Olympian.â
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