From
Kirkhill, she runs for the Inverness Harriers.[2] She moved to
Edinburgh as a teenager to pursue athletics and attend the
University of Edinburgh.[3] She later waived the right to anonymity to expose the sexual abuse she suffered at the hands of her coach in Edinburgh, John Lees, in an investigation by The Daily Telegraph.[4] She spent a year training in Spain at the High-Performance Centre in
Madrid.[5]
Career
In January 2022, she won the Scottish Inter District cross country championships at
Irvine.[6] In February 2022, she won the Scottish cross country title in
Falkirk.[7] In October 2022, she set a new course record at the Loch Ness 10k.[8] She ran a half marathon personal best of 1:11.18 in
Copenhagen in September 2023.[9]
She won the Inverness half marathon in March 2024 and set the fastest women's time in the 39-year history of the race, running 1:11:47 breaking the previous record set by
Natasha Phillips.[10]
On her marathon debut she finished eleventh at the
2024 London Marathon in a time of 2:29:15.[11]
Personal life
She developed neurotic behaviour and disordered eating after being sexually abused by disgraced athletics coach John Lees, whose coaching licence was revoked in 2021 by an independent appeal committee.[12] In February 2021, she along with pole vaulter Anna Gordon and middle-distance runner Kate Seary, wrote an open letter to
UK Athletics urging for lifetime bans to be imposed on coaches found guilty of sexual or physical misconduct. She completed an internship in policy and public affairs at the
British Heart Foundation. She and Seary started the advocacy group Kyniska for women in sport.[13][14]
References
^"M.Maclennan". World Athletics. Retrieved 21 March 2024.