Career
Born in Birmingham, Alabama, she is the sister of Olympian Carl Lewis. She first came to prominence as a high school athlete while at Willingboro High School in New Jersey, setting the high school indoor long jump record at 21" 7.5" (659 meters) in 1981. She first competed internationally at the 1980 Olympic Boycott Games, taking the silver medal with a jump of 6.60 meters.
Her 6.81m jump from that competition is the current United States, North American and Pan American Junior record.
After winning the Olympic Trials, she represented the United States at the 1984 Summer Olympics and managed to finish in ninth place, aged twenty. In Zürich in August that year, Lewis reached her peak, setting a personal best and breaking the American record in the long jump twice at the same track meeting.
Her record of 7.04 m stood for two years until it was beaten by Jackie Joyner-Kersee. She competed at the 1987 IAAF World Indoor Championships, finishing in ninth position with a best jump of 6.23 m.
She represented the United States at the Olympics for a third time, but she failed to qualify for the final at the 1988 Olympics.
Following her retirement from track and field, she went on to work as a commentator for various events for National Broadcasting Company Sports. She commentated on the track events for the 1996, 2000 and 2008 Summer Olympics. In 2000 she began competing in two-woman bobsled and, although she failed to make the 2002 United States Olympic team, she served as Shauna Rohbock"s brakeman at the 2002 World Cup in Calgary.
All information taken from IAAF Profile.