Wisconsin Badgers' Kiley Robbins poses during athletic portrait day Sept 3, 2024 in Madison, Wisconsin. Photo by Darren Hauck/Wisconsin Athletic Communications
Darren Hauck

For Robbins, finish line includes a lot more than speed

Big Ten champion has sights set on medical school and pro career

By Andy Baggot

BY ANDY BAGGOT
UWBadgers.com Insider

Kiley Robbins has this crazy dream that, frankly, doesn’t seem all that far-fetched once she lays it all out there for you.

She wants to go to medical school to be an anesthesiologist. At the same time, she wants to be a world-class sprinter specializing in the 100 meters.

This is the same Robbins who needed only three years to secure her undergraduate degree in biology from Wisconsin and, in four years, managed to set school records in the 100 outdoors (11.13 seconds) and 60 indoors (7.22 seconds).

This is the same Robbins who’s on pace to receive her master’s degree in clinical health and informatics in May of 2025 while, at the same time, hopes to qualify for the U.S. entry in the World Track and Field Championships in Tokyo, Japan in September.   

“It seems extreme, but I’ve done hard things in the past,” she acknowledged with an immense smile.

“She has that determination,” said her father Karl, a retired Milwaukee police lieutenant. “She’s not going to give up on anything. She works hard, not only in her academics, but on the track.”

Kiley Robbins wins individual championship in 60m dash Feb. 24 2024

Karl knows this in part because he sends brief emails to his daughter’s coaches and professors at the start of every spring and fall semester, asking them one very specific question:

“What do you expect out of my daughter this year?”

Kareem Jackson, an associate head coach for the Badgers who oversees the sprints, hurdles and horizontal jumps, offered one of his typical replies.

“I know she’s had a really good summer and her weight room numbers have gone up,” he wrote back recently.

But Jackson knows there’s so much more to Kiley’s story. Her strength, he said, is her patience in learning and having a better understanding of how to run fast.

“You don’t make it to Wisconsin or some of these other schools and not have the talent to run, the talent to run fast,” he said. “However, it’s a craft – a skill – that has to be developed and honed in on and it requires patience. And, let’s be honest, everybody’s not very patient these days. They want success right now and it’s easy to go external and not go internal. She’s been the direct opposite of all of that. To witness it, to see it every day, I think is the biggest benefit that any and everybody that’s on our team gets to see."

Kiley came to UW from Divine Savior Holy Angels High School in Milwaukee having not won a WIAA state title while navigating the specter of the COVID pandemic in 2020. But Brian Calhoun, a former NFL running back who played for the Badgers and is now a coach and the director of fitness and performance at DSHA, called Jackson with a strong recommendation.

“I think she’s going to be really good,” Calhoun told Jackson.

Evidence of that came to life quickly when Robbins debuted with a second-place finish in the Big Ten indoor 60. She not only improved her personal best every season since then, she’s the reigning Big Ten champion in the indoor 60.

“She’s all about consistency,” Jackson said. “She’s always showed up when the team needed here. She’s just gotten better and better and better and better.

“Where she’s gotten better is her understanding of it’s equally as important to develop her weaknesses as it is her strengths. That is rare.

“Every sprinter wants to do block work. Nobody wants to do 300s or 400s or repeat runs. Nobody wants to do that stuff. She’s embraced all those things because she realizes the better that she is there, then the things she’s really good are just going to be expanded.

“It speaks to her understanding that her best has yet to come and everything she does is part of this process. So, she has tremendous perspective. The patience required to realize maximum potential is very rarely met,” Jackson added.

“I had to grow into the sport and age with the sport,” Robbins said. “The only way I got there was to be patient, knowing there’d be times I feel down and times that I did great.”

Kiley Robbins and Kareem Jackson
“You don’t make it to Wisconsin or some of these other schools and not have the talent to run, the talent to run fast. However, it’s a craft – a skill – that has to be developed and honed in on and it requires patience. And, let’s be honest, everybody’s not very patient these days. They want success right now and it’s easy to go external and not go internal. She’s been the direct opposite of all of that. To witness it, to see it every day, I think is the biggest benefit that any and everybody that’s on our team gets to see."
Kareem Jackson on Kiley Robbins

Robbins is the latest in a series of high-quality women’s sprinters at Wisconsin. The difference between Robbins and the likes of Ebony McClendon, Destiny Huven and Taylor Gilling is that Robbins was a swimming and basketball standout who had to be coaxed to come out for track.

“I joined it honestly to hang out with my friends,” Robbins said.

Her older sister, Shavonda, was Kiley’s first true role model in sports.

“I watched all her volleyball and basketball games and couldn’t wait to play, too.” Kiley said. “I like to model myself after her. She was a true big sister.”

Another role model for Robbins came in the form of Dr. Felicia D. Robertson, a family friend who was Kiley’s pediatrician.

“She’s a black woman who’s been like family to me,” Kiley said. “I wanted to be just like her. My dream of being a doctor came from her.”

Said Kiley’s dad: “That’s what she’s wanted to do since she was 14.”

Robbins will compete indoors for the Badgers, then, hopefully, begin prepping for outdoor competition while applying to medical schools – she wants to stay in-state – and studying for her MCATs.

“She’s run 11.13,” Jackson said. “I think if she runs 11.10 or under, she’ll certainly have a pro contract out there for her.”

Kiley’s mother, Sharonda, works as a special education teacher at a Milwaukee grade school, said she’s proud of her youngest daughter because she’s trying to maximize her future.

“You know how sometimes you can wait a lifetime to meet your favorite person?” Sharonda said. “I tell her all the time, ‘You know how people glorify certain athletes?’ I tell her, ‘I glorify you. You are such an awesome person.’”

Kiley said the upper floors of the Student Athlete Performance Center – where academic services are located – became her home over the last four years.

“I connected with a lot of people,” Robbins said. “Wisconsin has provided me with so much and I couldn’t be more thankful.”

The UW track & field team hosts the Badger Challenge at McClimon Memorial Outdoor Track Facility in Madison, Wisconsin, on Friday May 3, 2024.
Kiley Robbins