Trained by the respected coach
John Anderson, Jamieson was a national champion in multiple events (as well as a
Scotland international in
field hockey) and still holds the record for most golds won overall at the Scottish Athletics Championships with 16 claimed over a decade between 1960 and 1970 (two in the
100-yard dash, three in the
80 metres hurdles, seven in the long jump and four in the
pentathlon). At British level, she claimed a long jump gold medal in 1964 at the
AAA Indoor Championships and a pentathlon bronze behnd
Mary Peters at the
1966 WAAA Championships. On a wider platform, she entered three events at the
1958 Commonwealth Games (100 yards,
220 yards and
high jump, though without great success), again made little impact on the
100 yards event at the
1966 Games however achieved fourth place in the
long jump event, then focused solely on the long jump at her 'home' games at
Edinburgh in
1970, but
finished in fourth just outside the medals once more. At the 1964 Olympics, she qualified for the final group with the exact distance required – 6.00m – but was unable to match or better this score in the final; British teammate
Mary Rand won the gold medal and recorded a world record jump (6.76m) in the competition. ==Personal life==