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Jessica Fox (canoeist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Australian canoeist (born 1994)

Jessica Fox
Personal information
Nickname
Foxy[1]
NationalityAustralian, French
Born (1994-06-11)11 June 1994 (age 31)
Marseille, France
Height166 cm (5 ft 5 in)[2]
Weight60 kg (132 lb)[2]
Websitewww.jessicafox.com.au/
Sport
CountryAustralia
SportCanoe slalom
Event
K1, C1, Kayak cross
ClubPenrith Valley Canoeing
Medal record
Women'scanoe slalom
Event1st2nd3rd
Olympic Games312
World Championships1453
Youth Olympic Games100
U23 World Championships814
Junior World Championships400
Total3079
Representing Australia
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place2020 TokyoC1
Gold medal – first place2024 ParisK1
Gold medal – first place2024 ParisC1
Silver medal – second place2012 LondonK1
Bronze medal – third place2016 Rio de JaneiroK1
Bronze medal – third place2020 TokyoK1
World Championships
Gold medal – first place2013 PragueC1
Gold medal – first place2013 PragueC1 team
Gold medal – first place2014 Deep Creek LakeC1
Gold medal – first place2014 Deep Creek LakeK1
Gold medal – first place2015 LondonC1
Gold medal – first place2015 LondonC1 team
Gold medal – first place2017 PauK1
Gold medal – first place2018 Rio de JaneiroC1
Gold medal – first place2018 Rio de JaneiroK1
Gold medal – first place2019 La Seu d'UrgellC1 team
Gold medal – first place2021 BratislavaKayak cross
Gold medal – first place2022 AugsburgKayak cross
Gold medal – first place2023 LondonK1
Gold medal – first place2023 LondonK1 team
Silver medal – second place2017 PauC1 team
Silver medal – second place2019 La Seu d'UrgellC1
Silver medal – second place2019 La Seu d'UrgellK1
Silver medal – second place2022 AugsburgC1
Silver medal – second place2022 AugsburgK1
Bronze medal – third place2010 TacenC1
Bronze medal – third place2017 PauK1 team
Bronze medal – third place2023 LondonC1
Oceania Championships
Gold medal – first place2025 PenrithC1
Gold medal – first place2025 PenrithK1
Silver medal – second place2025 PenrithKayak cross
Youth Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place2010 SingaporeK1
U23 World Championships
Gold medal – first place2012 WausauC1 team
Gold medal – first place2013 Liptovský MikulášC1
Gold medal – first place2014 PenrithC1
Gold medal – first place2014 PenrithK1
Gold medal – first place2015 Foz do IguaçuK1
Gold medal – first place2016 KrakówC1
Gold medal – first place2016 KrakówK1
Gold medal – first place2017 BratislavaK1
Silver medal – second place2015 Foz do IguaçuK1 team
Bronze medal – third place2013 Liptovský MikulášC1 team
Bronze medal – third place2014 PenrithK1 team
Bronze medal – third place2016 KrakówC1 team
Bronze medal – third place2017 BratislavaK1 team
Junior World Championships
Gold medal – first place2010 FoixC1
Gold medal – first place2010 FoixK1
Gold medal – first place2012 WausauC1
Gold medal – first place2012 WausauK1

Jessica Esther FoxOAM (born 11 June 1994) is a French-born Australian Olympic and world championslalom canoeist.[3]

Fox made her Olympic debut at 18 years of age in the2012 Summer Olympics in London, where she won a silver medal in theK1 event. She won a bronze medal in thesame eventfour years later in theRio de Janeiro Olympics, and again at the2020 Tokyo Summer Olympics,[4] before finally winning the gold medal in theK1 event in Paris at the2024 Summer Olympics. Fox is the sole Olympic champion in the C1 event, having won the gold medal in Tokyo at the2020 Summer Olympics when the event debuted at the Olympic Games, and again finishing first at the2024 Summer Olympics. Her six olympic medals make her the most decorated canoe slalom paddler, male or female, in Olympic history. She also won a gold medal at the2010 Summer Youth Olympics in the K1 event.

Fox has won 22 medals at theICF Canoe Slalom World Championships with 14 golds (C1:2013,2014,2015,2018; K1: 2014,2017, 2018,2023; C1 team: 2013, 2015,2019; K1 team: 2023; Kayak cross:2021,2022), five silvers (C1: 2019, 2022; K1: 2019, 2022; C1 team: 2017) and three bronzes (C1:2010, 2023; K1 team: 2017). Her ten gold medals in individual events make her the most successful paddler, male or female, in World Championship history.

Fox has won the overallWorld Cup title seven times in the C1 class (2013,2015,2017,2018,2019,2023,2024) and five times in the K1 class (2018, 2019,2021,2022, 2023). She has finished the year as theWorld No. 1 in C1 12 times, including an uninterrupted streak from 2013 to 2023, and World No. 1 in K1 eight times.[5]

Fox, a ten-time individual world champion, twelve-time World Cup champion and three-time individual Olympic champion, is considered the greatest individual paddler of all time.[6]

During the Paris 2024 Olympic Games Fox was elected to theIOC Athletes' Commission as one of four new members until theBrisbane 2032 Games.[7]

Early life

[edit]

Fox was born inMarseille, France, and when she was four years old, she moved to the suburb ofPenrith, in Sydney, with her family.[8][9][10] Fox is Jewish,[11]as is her mother,[12][13][14] whereas her father is not.[15] Her parents areRichard Fox andMyriam Fox-Jerusalmi, who both competed as canoeists at theOlympics: her father for Great Britain at the 1992 Games, and her mother for France at the 1996 Games, where she won a bronze medal.[16] Her father is Second Vice President of theInternational Canoe Federation, as well asAustralian Canoeing's high-performance manager, and a five-time world champion.[9] Her younger sisterNoemie Fox is also a world and Olympic champion slalom canoeist, and her auntRachel Crosbee is a former world championship slalom canoe silver medalist.[17]

Fox attended Leonay Public School and thenBlaxland High School, where she completed herHSC year in 2011 by ranking first in New South Wales for PDHPE, and achieved anATAR score of 99.1. She studied in the Elite Athlete Program at theUniversity of Sydney,[18] where she is working on a degree in media/communications. She is studying for a Bachelor of Social Science (Psychology) atSwinburne Online. She is bilingual in English and French.[9][10]

Fox suffered a back injury that impacted her performance in 2012.[19][16] In 2025, she underwent surgery to remove a kidney tumour, forcing her withdrawal from theCanoe Slalom World Cup in Europe.[20]

Career

[edit]
Jessica Fox in 2019

Fox races in K1, C1 and Kayak Cross events and is coached by her mother, Myriam.[10][19][16] She started in the sport in 2005 by canoeing on theNepean River.[9][10] She has a scholarship and is affiliated with theAustralian Institute of Sport and theNew South Wales Institute of Sport.[10] In club competitions, she represents the Penrith Valley Canoe Club.[10]

2009–2012: Rise through the ranks

[edit]

In September 2009, Fox made her Australian senior national team bid.[10] She competed at the 2009 ICF World Ranking in Merano, Italy, finishing third in the K1 event.[10] At the 2009 AYOF event in Penrith, New South Wales, she finished first in the women's K1 event.[10]

Fox placed 5th in the K1 event and won a bronze medal in the C1 event at the2010 World Championships inTacen.[21] At the2010 Summer Youth Olympics in Singapore, she won the gold in thegirls' K1 slalom event.[9][19] At the2010 Junior World Championships inFoix, she won gold in K1, and won the inaugural C1 event at that level. She won her first World Cup by taking out the C1 event at the third round inLa Seu d'Urgell. Domestically, Fox won the C1 event and placed 9th in the K1 event at the Oceania Continental Championships in Penrith (counting to World Cup points), and placed 1st and 3rd at the National Championships inEildon, Victoria, in the C1 and K1 events, respectively.[10]

In 2011, Fox won gold medals in the C1 event at World Cups 2 and 3.[10] At the2011 World Championships inBratislava, Slovakia, she finished 19th, which gave Australia an automatic spot in the event at the 2012 Summer Olympics.[10] She won silver medals at Australian Open and the Oceania Championships in the women's K1 event in 2011.[10]

In 2012, Fox was selected to represent Australia for the first time at theOlympics in thewomen's K1 event, where she won the silver medal at the age of 18.[10] Her pre-Olympic schedule included training on the Olympic course in London in April,[19][22] and World Cup competitions in Wales, France and Spain, plus the Junior World Championship in the United States.[19] Her result has been described as competitive revenge against the 44-year-old Czech paddlerŠtěpánka Hilgertová, who had beaten Fox's mother Myriam to theK1 gold medal sixteen years earlier in the1996 Summer Olympics. Her silver medal improved on her mother's bronze from Atlanta 1996 and her father's fourth place in Barcelona 1992, and earned her the nickname "the Silver Fox" from teammates and the press.[22]

2013–2016: Ascendancy to the top

[edit]

Fox won her first World Championship titles in the C1 event and the C1 team event at the2013 World Championships in Prague.

At the2014 World Championships atDeep Creek Lake, in the United States, Fox became the first athlete to win the C1 and K1 events at the same World Championships, bestingJana Dukátová, who became the first to do it at separate events winning a world championship title in K1 in 2006 and C1 in 2010.

At the2016 Summer Olympics, Fox won her second Olympic medal, with a bronze in theK1 event inRio de Janeiro, Brazil. After winning multiple World Cup races, she won the overall World Cup title in the Kayak Single Slalom (K1) and was second overall in Canoe Single Slalom (C1). She also won the U23 World Championships in K1 and C1 in Kraków, Poland. Additionally, she also won the Oceania Championships Slalom C1 in Penrith, Australia.[23]

2017–2020: Record breaking dominance

[edit]

In 2017, Fox won the K1 event at the2017 World Championships. Fox won the C1 and finished second in the K1 for the2017 World Cup, and was awarded the Canoeist of the Year award, and the NSW Athlete of the Year award.[23][24]

In 2018, Fox was a double ICF Canoe World Champion in both the C1 and K1 at the2018 World Championships, and again won a number of World Cups in both disciplines, finishing first in both the C1 and K12018 World Cup standings. Her 2018 season featured an undefeated run in C1, sweeping all five World Cups and the World Championships, including three consecutive 'Golden Doubles' at the first three World Cups.[25] In 2019, Fox repeated her World Cup dominance, again finishing first in both the K1 and C1World Cup standings. Fox won the Oceania Championships in Canoe Slalom again, and won silver in both K1 and C1 events at the2019 World Championships .[23]

2021–2023: Olympic heartbreak to glory

[edit]

At the2020 Tokyo Olympics, held in 2021 due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, Fox finished third to win the bronze medal in the Women's K1.[26] Fox's final run included a penalty time of 4 seconds, ultimately putting her final time 1.23 seconds behind the winnerRicarda Funk. During the event, Fox also gained media attention for using a condom to repair her kayak.[27] Fox was also the fastest qualifier for the final of the inauguralwomen's C1 event at the Olympics, where she went on to win her first Olympic gold medal, beating silver medalist Mallory Franklin of Great Britain by more than three seconds with a penalty-free run.[28]

At the2021 World Championships inBratislava, Fox did not progress to the final of either theK1 orC1 for the first time in her entire career, after incurring 50-second penalties in the semi-finals of both. On the final day of competition she became World Champion in thekayak cross, an 8th individual world title in a 3rd unique event, in just her third international appearance in the event.[29]

2024: Paris Olympics

[edit]

Fox was selected as the opening ceremonyflag bearer to representAustralia at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, France.[30] In her fourth Olympic Games, Fox was able to claim her first Olympic gold medal in theK1 event, having previously won one silver and two bronze medals in this event. Fox also managed to defend herC1 title. In doing so, Fox became the first paddler, male or female, to win and hold both K1 and C1 Olympic titles, and also became the most decorated athlete incanoe slalom at the Olympics. In the inauguralkayak cross event at the Olympics, Fox was eliminated in the heats, finishing 26th overall, in a race that featured her sister,Noemie Fox, who went on to win the gold medal.

Awards and honours

[edit]

Fox was the 2010 Penrith Press Junior Sports Star of the year and NewsLocal Medal winner.[19]

She has also served as the ambassador for the Premier's Sporting Challenge.[19]

In 2010, she was also named the Cumberland Courier Junior Sport Star, NSWIS Junior Athlete of the Year and the Pierre de Coubertin AOC award.[10]

In 2009, 2010 and 2011, she was named the Junior Canoeist of the Year Australian Canoeing.[10]

In 2011, she was named the Australian Canoeing Athlete of the Year.[10]

She earned the AIS Secondary Education award in 2011.[10]

She was awardedAIS Sport Performance Awards – Athlete of the Year for 2014.[31]

From 2014 to 2019 she was namedMaccabi World Union Australia's Outstanding Jewish Sportswoman.[32][33]

In 2018, she wonAIS Sport Performance Award Female Athlete of the Year.

In 2021, Fox was appointed member of theIOC Athletes' Commission.[34] In 2024, she was elected to that committee.[35]

In the2022 Australia Day Honours Fox was awarded theMedal of the Order of Australia.[36]

Television

[edit]

In 2017, Fox appeared as a celebrity contestant on theAustralian version ofHell's Kitchen.[37][38] She came 7th overall.[citation needed]

In August 2024, Fox filled in forAlex Cullen on the Nine Network'sToday as a sport presenter.[39]

Career statistics

[edit]

Major championships results timeline

[edit]
Event2009201020112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024
Olympic GamesC1Not held1Not held1
K1Not held2Not held3Not held3Not held1
Kayak crossNot held26
World ChampionshipsC13[a]38Not held111Not held612Not held2623Not held
K1519Not held1814Not held112Not held2521Not held
Kayak crossNot heldNot held1137Not held
C1 teamNot held1[b]Not held1DNS[b]1Not held261Not held511Not held
K1 team1111Not held4117Not held3716Not held131Not held
  1. ^Exhibition event
  2. ^abNot a medal event due to low number of participating nations

World Cup individual podiums

[edit]
1st place, gold medalist(s)2nd place, silver medalist(s)3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Total
C1359347
K11711331
Kayak cross2035
Kayak cross individual1012
Total55201085
SeasonDateVenuePositionEvent
201021 February 2010Penrith1stC11
27 June 2010La Seu d'Urgell1stC1
20112 July 2011L'Argentière-la-Bessée1stC1
9 July 2011Markkleeberg1stC1
20129 June 2012Cardiff2ndC1
201322 June 2013Cardiff2ndC1
29 June 2013Augsburg1stC1
6 July 2013La Seu d'Urgell1stC1
17 August 2013Tacen1stC1
18 August 2013Tacen1stK1
24 August 2013Bratislava1stC1
20148 June 2014Lee Valley3rdK1
14 June 2014Tacen1stC1
2 August 2014La Seu d'Urgell1stC1
201520 June 2015Prague2ndC1
21 June 2015Prague2ndK1
27 June 2015Kraków1stC1
8 August 2015La Seu d'Urgell1stC1
15 August 2015Pau2ndC1
16 August 2015Pau2ndK1
20164 June 2016Ivrea1stC1
5 June 2016Ivrea2ndK1
12 June 2016La Seu d'Urgell2ndK1
18 June 2016Pau2ndC1
3 September 2016Prague1stC1
10 September 2016Tacen2ndC1
11 September 2016Tacen1stK1
201724 June 2017Augsburg1stC1
1 July 2017Markkleeberg1stC1
2 July 2017Markkleeberg2ndK1
2 September 2017Ivrea1stC1
3 September 2017Ivrea2ndK1
9 September 2017La Seu d'Urgell2ndC1
10 September 2017La Seu d'Urgell2ndK1
201823 June 2018Liptovský Mikuláš1stK1
24 June 2018Liptovský Mikuláš1stC1
30 June 2018Kraków1stK1
1 July 2018Kraków1stC1
7 July 2018Augsburg1stK1
8 July 2018Augsburg1stC1
31 August 2018Tacen1stC1
1 September 2018Tacen2ndK1
9 September 2018La Seu d'Urgell1stC1
201915 June 2019Lee Valley3rdK1
16 June 2019Lee Valley3rdC1
30 June 2019Tacen1stC1
31 August 2019Markkleeberg2ndK1
1 September 2019Markkleeberg3rdC1
7 September 2019Prague1stK1
8 September 2019Prague1stC1
202112 June 2021Prague3rdK1
13 June 2021Prague1stC1
19 June 2021Markkleeberg1stK1
4 September 2021La Seu d'Urgell1stK1
5 September 2021La Seu d'Urgell1stC1
11 September 2021Pau1stK1
12 September 2021Pau2ndC1
12 September 2021Pau3rdKayak cross
202211 June 2022Prague1stK1
18 June 2022Kraków1stK1
25 June 2022Tacen1stK1
27 August 2022Pau1stK1
28 August 2022Pau3rdC1
28 August 2022Pau1stKayak cross
20233 June 2023Augsburg1stC1
9 June 2023Prague1stK1
10 June 2023Prague1stC1
17 June 2023Tacen1stK1
18 June 2023Tacen3rdKayak cross
1 September 2023La Seu d'Urgell1stC1
2 September 2023La Seu d'Urgell2ndK1
6 October 2023Vaires-sur-Marne1stK1
7 October 2023Vaires-sur-Marne1stC1
8 October 2023Vaires-sur-Marne3rdKayak cross
20241 June 2024Augsburg1stC1
7 June 2024Prague2ndK1
8 June 2024Prague2ndC1
14 June 2024Kraków1stK1
15 June 2024Kraków1stC1
16 June 2024Kraków1stKayak cross
21 September 2024La Seu d'Urgell1stC1
20257 June 2025La Seu d'Urgell1stC1
14 June 2025Pau1stC1
15 June 2025Pau3rdKayak cross individual
29 June 2025Prague1stKayak cross individual
1 Oceania Canoe Slalom Open counting for World Cup points

Complete World Cup results

[edit]
YearClassWC1WC2WC3WC4WC5PointsPosition
2008K1ContinentAustralia
11
PragueCzech Republic
 
TacenSlovenia
 
AugsburgGermany
 
3270th
2010K1ContinentAustralia
9
PragueCzech Republic
31
La SeuSpain
14
AugsburgGermany
 
6725th
C11711565th
2011K1TacenSlovenia
 
L'ArgentièreFrance
7
MarkkleebergGermany
17
PragueCzech Republic
 
6621st
C1111206th
2012K1CardiffUnited Kingdom
7
PauFrance
8
La SeuSpain
6
PragueCzech Republic
 
BratislavaSlovakia
 
12014th
C125519th
2013K1CardiffUnited Kingdom
5
AugsburgGermany
12
La SeuSpain
10
TacenSlovenia
1
BratislavaSlovakia
9
2052nd
C1211112951st
2014K1Lee ValleyUnited Kingdom
3
TacenSlovenia
9
PragueCzech Republic
5
La SeuSpain
9
AugsburgGermany
 
1669th
C141811984th
2015K1PragueCzech Republic
2
KrakówPoland
29
Liptovský MikulášSlovakia
9
La SeuSpain
5
PauFrance
2
2523rd
C1218123181st
2016K1IvreaItaly
2
La SeuSpain
2
PauFrance
10
PragueCzech Republic
17
TacenSlovenia
1
2902nd
C112122853rd
2017K1PragueCzech Republic
10
AugsburgGermany
11
MarkkleebergGermany
2
IvreaItaly
2
La SeuSpain
2
2862nd
C12411123071st
2018K1Liptovský MikulášSlovakia
1
KrakówPoland
1
AugsburgGermany
1
TacenSlovenia
2
La SeuSpain
10
3031st
C1111113601st
2019K1Lee ValleyUnited Kingdom
3
BratislavaSlovakia
6
TacenSlovenia
27
MarkkleebergGermany
2
PragueCzech Republic
1
2781st
C13111313121st
2021K1PragueCzech Republic
3
MarkkleebergGermany
1
La SeuSpain
1
PauFrance
1
2901st
C114122762nd
Kayak cross831254th
2022K1PragueCzech Republic
1
KrakówPoland
1
TacenSlovenia
1
PauFrance
1
La SeuSpain
11
3041st
C1245123102106th
Kayak cross1014DNS1DNS8612th
2023K1AugsburgGermany
26
PragueCzech Republic
1
TacenSlovenia
1
La SeuSpain
2
ParisFrance
1
3081st
C11110113341st
Kayak crossDNS531831943rd

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Olympic profile". Archived fromthe original on 30 July 2021. Retrieved30 July 2021.
  2. ^ab"Jess Fox".Sports-Reference.com. Archived fromthe original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved27 January 2018.
  3. ^"Jessica Fox (AUS)".CanoeSlalom.net. Retrieved30 September 2017.
  4. ^"Jess Fox wins bronze after drama in K1 final".7 News. 27 July 2021.
  5. ^"ICF Canoe Slalom World Rankings". 14 September 2016. Retrieved17 September 2021.
  6. ^Budowsky, Ethan (26 July 2024)."Canoeing legend Fox bears Australian flag at Opening Ceremony, begins quest for history".nbcolympics.com. Retrieved28 July 2024.
  7. ^"Meet your new IOC Athletes' Commission members".olympics.com. 8 August 2024. Retrieved20 August 2024.
  8. ^"Encouraging signs for young Fox – London 2012 Olympic Games (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 11 June 2012. Retrieved20 June 2012.
  9. ^abcde"Jessica Fox: at home in water".Penrith Star. 30 May 2012. Retrieved20 June 2012.
  10. ^abcdefghijklmnopqr"AIS Canoeing – Slalom – Jessica Fox (K1/C1)". Canoe.org.au. Archived fromthe original on 29 March 2012. Retrieved20 June 2012.
  11. ^"Jewish Aussie 'Flying Fox' wins Olympic silver; Jessica Fox, Australian-Jewish kayaker, wins silver medal in London, 16 years after her mother won bronze in Atlanta".Haaretz. Retrieved7 April 2014.
  12. ^Goldberg, Dan (5 August 2012)."Jewish Australian kayaker Jessica Fox takes silver medal".Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Retrieved7 April 2014.
  13. ^"Jews in the News: Andy Samberg, Seth Rogen and Henry Winkler". Letmypeoplegrow.org. Archived fromthe original on 23 October 2012. Retrieved21 September 2012.
  14. ^Goldberg, Dan (5 August 2012)."Jewish Aussie 'Flying Fox' wins Olympic silver".Haaretz. Retrieved21 September 2012.
  15. ^Bloom, Nate (21 August 2012)."Interfaith Celebrities: Lisa Kudrow; Tavi Gevinson, Oracle of Girl World; Olympic Results and Raisman's Rabbi".InterfaithFamily.Fox's British father, Richard Fox, 52, who is not Jewish, and her French Jewish mother, Myriam Jerusalmi-Fox, 51, were both top kayakers.
  16. ^abc"Jessica Fox paddles into Second World Cup Slalom Final".Herald Sun. Melbourne. Retrieved20 June 2012.
  17. ^Knoke, Charlotte. (July 3, 2024)."Fox sisters Jess and Noemie to take on the Paris 2024 Olympics together,"NOW to love.
  18. ^"Sydney Uni Olympians take medals at London 2012".University of Sydney. 3 August 2012. Retrieved14 August 2012.
  19. ^abcdefgGeorgakopoulos, Chris (24 May 2012)."Jessica Fox to press home Olympics advantage – Canoe/Kayak".Where I Live. Penrith Press. Retrieved20 June 2012.
  20. ^"Olympic canoe champion Fox recovering after tumour removed".France 24. 28 August 2025. Retrieved28 August 2025.
  21. ^"2010 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships SLOKA 2010". International Canoeing Federation. Archived fromthe original on 12 March 2012. Retrieved20 June 2012.
  22. ^abHerman, Martyn (2 August 2012)."Fearless Fox rises from depths to win silver".Reuters. Retrieved2 August 2012.
  23. ^abc"Jessica Fox".Red Bull. Retrieved7 May 2019.
  24. ^"Jessica Fox snares top award". 27 November 2017.
  25. ^"Fox Begins Pursuit Of Fourth Straight Golden Double". 31 August 2018. Retrieved14 September 2021.
  26. ^"Jess Fox claims Tokyo Olympics bronze medal in women's canoe slalom K1".ABC. 27 July 2021.
  27. ^"How a condom helped Olympic canoeist Jess Fox repair her kayak".7 News. 29 July 2021.
  28. ^"Jess Fox wins Tokyo Olympics gold in C1 canoe slalom".ABC. 29 July 2021.
  29. ^"Olympic Champions bounce back to best".ICF Media. 26 September 2021. Retrieved29 September 2021.
  30. ^Pentony, Luke. (24 July 2024)."Jess Fox, Eddie Ockenden named Australia's flag-bearers for Paris Olympics opening ceremony,"ABC.
  31. ^"Rabbitohs, Fearnley, Fox win top ASPAS".Australian Sports Commission News, 11 February 2015. Archived fromthe original on 11 February 2015. Retrieved11 February 2015.
  32. ^Desiatnik, Shane and Fetter, Aaron."Maccabi Australia, NSW and VIC award winners".australianjewishnews.com. Retrieved1 August 2024.
  33. ^"Outstanding Sportsman & Sportswoman Award", Maccabi.
  34. ^"Olympic canoeing champion Jessica Fox appointed to IOC Athletes' Commission".International Olympic Committee. 5 November 2021. Retrieved3 August 2024.
  35. ^"Olympics-American Felix and Australia's Fox elected to IOC athletes' commission".MSN.Reuters. 8 August 2024. Retrieved10 August 2024.
  36. ^"Australia Day Honours List"(PDF).The Governor-General of the Commonwealth of Australia. 26 January 2022. Retrieved25 January 2022.
  37. ^Saw, Amelia (24 March 2017)."The celebrities taking on Marco Pierre White inHell's Kitchen Australia are named".news.com.au. Retrieved24 March 2017.
  38. ^Coster, Alice (24 March 2017)."Hell's Kitchen Australia host doesn't know the celebrity contestants".Herald Sun. Melbourne. Retrieved24 March 2017.
  39. ^"Olympic Gold medallist replaces Karl on Today desk".9now.nine.com.au. Retrieved19 August 2024.

External links

[edit]
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(withEddie Ockenden)
Paris 2024
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Incumbent
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