Glenda Estefania Morejón Quiñónez (born 30 May 2000) is an Ecuadorian racewalker.[1] On 27 July 2017, she won the 5000m category of the World U18 Championships, becoming the second female Ecuadorian athlete to do so.
Biography
Glenda Morejón was born on 30 May 2000 in Ibarra, Ecuador. She was educated in Ibarra at the Tarquino Jaramillo School.[2]
Glenda Morejón comes from a family of medium-low social status, her father Luis Morejón is a professional, in addition to helping with domestic chores, her mother María del Carmen Quiñónez works in the 24 de Mayo market in the city of Otavalo and her sister María Belén, who follows in her footsteps is a walker. At the age of thirteen Glenda began to practice in the field of Olympic walks, along with the help of her coach Giovan Delgado a Guayaquil graduated in Physical Culture who works in the Educational Unit Ibarra and who lives in Ibarra since 1988, which also founded the Tarquino Jaramillo Athletic School in 2001, where Glenda trains along with 24 other athletes.[3]
With respect to her university education, the Universidad Técnica Particular de Loja (UTPL) has awarded Glenda a sports scholarship that covers 70% of her first cycle tuition and will cover 90% of the total cost of tuition in all cycles of her Business Administration career in open and distance modality.[4]
Despite her record of winning acclaim for Latin America, Morejón has had difficulty securing funding for her training or equipment. She trained with patched and holed shoes, drank tap water, and used aguapanela as an energizer. Despite a local campaign by Morejón's management, she had to go alone to Nairobi and with basic equipment. Ecuador's Ministry of Sport has denied funding for Morejón despite international protest.[5][8]
In May the 5th, 2018 she won the silver medal in the World Championship held in Taicang, China.[9]
Tokyo 2020
Although she has won four international contests, she was as considered a substitute athlete for the 2020 Tokyo. However, in 2019, Glenda Morejón was promoted to the High Performance Plan, the Olympic competitor program from the Sport Secretary in Ecuador. She participated in the Women's 20 kilometres walk but didn't finished.[10]