Gulfport's Brittney Reese leaps for gold 5 Gallery: Gulfport's Brittney Reese leaps for gold

LONDON -- Gulfport native Brittney Reese won the Olympic gold medal in the long jump in London Wednesday, leaping 7.12 meters in her second attempt of the day.

Reese, 25, won the NCAA championship in both 2007 and 2008 at Ole Miss and was world outdoor champion in 2009 and 2011 and indoor champion in 2010 and 2012. She played basketball at Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College prior to starring in track at Ole Miss.

After leaving the most important decision of her career up to her persuasive mother, Reese knew there was only one place to start looking when it was time to celebrate her Olympic gold medal in the long jump.

Reese claimed one of the three gold medals the U.S. track and field team won Wednesday night at the London Games, becoming the first American woman to win the Olympic long jump title since Jackie Joyner-Kersee in 1988.

"It's a surreal moment," she said. "I got very emotional -- you do when you're representing your country.

"My mom and aunt are here, so this is a great moment for me and my family."

Within the space of a half hour at the packed, 80,000-seat Olympic stadium, Allyson Felix finally won the 200-meter title that had eluded her at Athens and Beijing, Aries Merritt won the 110-meter hurdles gold medal and Reese won the long jump.

The two-time world champion went into the competition with the best jump of the season and put down the best mark in the final with 23 feet, 4 1-2 inches (7.12 meters) on her second attempt. Russia's Elena Sokolova took the silver medal at 23-2 1-2 (7.07) and Janay Deloach earned the bronze for the United States at 22-7 1-4 (6.89).

It was a major achievement for Reese, who could easily have been lost to track and field. She was considering offers for basketball scholarships when her mother, Carla Young, made a fateful decision for her: Stick with track and field, at the University of Mississippi.

"My mom fell in love with Ole Miss and they were still in contact with me while I was in my community college," Reese said. "I sat down with her and she told me track is what I needed to do -- and Mamma knows best, so that's what i did."

Now that she's the reigning Olympic and world champion indoors and out -- and is third all-time in the U.S. behind Joyner-Kersee and Marion Jones in terms of longest jumps -- she could be excused for thinking about another career change.

But that's not likely before the 2016 Games in Rio.

"I feel like this is just the beginning," the 25-year-old Reese said. "I am going to train four more years and come back and hopefully defend my title."

She dedicated the London Olympic title to the people of Mississippi and others who are still rebuilding in the wake of the deadly and devastating Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

She does what she can -- during the 2011 Thanksgiving season, Reese purchased 100 turkeys to be given away to help the homeless near her hometown of Gulfport, Miss -- but the gold medal is special.

Reese lived through the disaster that damaged her house, but was conscious that she got off lightly and wanted to do something significant at the Beijing Olympics four years ago to give her friends and neighbors a boost.

"In '08 my goal was to come out there and get a medal. And when I placed fifth, I was devastated and cried the whole way back to the (athletes) village," she said. "I had the whole Gulf coast behind me. I got a lot of emails, a lot of Facebook and Twitter about my Gulf coast family representing me, being there for me, and I wanted to come out here and do that for them."

Reese and her family had to sandbag their home to avoid flood inundation during the disaster, but the ceiling of the house collapsed and forced them out.

"We were out of the house for like two months because we had mold and we were living out of mobile homes and trailers," she said. "It was a tough time and (makes) you realize how blessed you are to have necessities.

"It was a real true eye-opener and my city is now rebuilt and we have most of the stuff back. But we don't have a lot of the homes back. This was a great way for me to bring something home to them to show that we can all do this together."