Kerri Lee Walsh Jennings (born August 15, 1978) is an American professionalbeach volleyball player, three-time Olympic gold medalist, and a one-time Olympic bronze medalist.[1] She is the beach volleyball leader in career victories as of 2016 having won 135 international and domestic tournaments.[2] (Disputed: The source includes only American domestic titles.)
Walsh Jennings and teammateMisty May-Treanor were the gold medalists in beach volleyball at the2004,2008 and2012 Summer Olympics. They also won theFIVB Beach Volleyball World Championships in2003,2005 and2007. The pair set various records throughout their partnership, including awin streak of 112 consecutive matches (19 consecutive tournament titles) in 2007–2008, breaking their own previous record of 89 consecutive match wins.[3] They have been called "the greatest beach volleyball team of all time."[4][5][3][6]
Walsh was born inSanta Clara, California, the daughter of Margery Lee (née Formico, Italian American[7]) and Timothy Joseph Walsh. Walsh grew up inScotts Valley, six miles (9.7 km) north ofSanta Cruz. She attended grade school there until the end of her middle school years. Before she started high school, her family moved toSan Jose. Walsh attendedArchbishop Mitty High School, competing on the volleyball and basketball teams. She led her school's teams to three state championships in volleyball, in 1993, 1994 and 1995. She also led her school's basketball team to a state championship in 1995. She was namedGatorade National High School Volleyball Player of the Year in 1996, the first time the award was given. Walsh was also the #1 volleyball athlete recruit in the nation her senior year (1995.) While in high school she competed against her future beach doubles partner,Misty May-Treanor.[8]
Walsh attendedStanford University on a volleyball scholarship. While there she was selected as a first-team All-American four years in a row, becoming only the second player in the history of collegiate volleyball to be chosen first team all four years of their collegiate careers.[9][10] While at Stanford her school's volleyball team won over 90% of its matches, posting a 122–11 overall record. The Cardinal won four Pac-10 titles and three times reached the NCAA Final Four, winning the title in 1996 and 1997, and falling toPenn State in the championship game in her senior year in 1999. She was selected as the MVP of the Final Four in 1996,[11] and wasco-National Player of the Year in 1999.[12] She was also the first player in PAC-10 history to record over 1,500 kills (1,553), 1,200 digs (1,285) and 500 blocks (502). Walsh is considered to be one of the best all-around players in collegiate volleyball history.[13] She graduated from Stanford in 2001 with aB.A. inAmerican studies.[14][15]

Walsh Jennings plays professional beach volleyball on the U.S.AVP Tour and internationally on theFIVB World Tour. For most of her career she played with partner Misty May-Treanor, forming the most successful beach pairings in AVP history. May and Walsh formed a partnership on the beach circuit in 2001, finishing the season with the number five ranking in the world. In 2002 the team reached the number one ranking. They continued their dominance in 2003, winning all eight tournaments they entered and a then-record 90 straight matches, including the world championships where they upset defending world champions Brazil in the final.[16]
In 2010 May-Treanor and Walsh extended a winning streak to 112 matches before losing to Olympic teammatesElaine Youngs andNicole Branagh in the AVP Crocs Cup Shootout in Ohio. To that point the pair had won 19 straight titles.[16]
Following the retirement of partner Misty May-Treanor in 2012, Walsh teamed withApril Ross. She went on to break the career record for most wins by a female professional volleyball player when she won the FIVB Grand Slam inXiamen, China. The win gave Walsh the 113th title of her career, breaking the old mark set by May-Treanor.[17] Walsh and Ross won 21–14, 17–21, 15–12 over the Brazilian pair of Taiana Lima and Talita Da Rocha Antunes. It was the Americans' third title in five events since joining forces.
She played alongside partner April Ross at the Long Beach, California Grand Slam,[18] which is part of theFIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour. The pair won all 3 matches, against Carolina Horta Maximo|Carol/Ana Patricia Silva Ramos|Ana Patrícia Brazil (21–17, 21–19),Humana-Paredes/Pischke Canada (21–16, 21–17), andMaria Antonelli/Lili Brazil (21–19, 18–21, 15–13).[19]
In semi final action (August 27, 2016) Walsh Jennings and Ross played againstChantal Laboureur/Julia Sude of Germany and won in straight sets (21–17, 21–16). In the finals Walsh Jennings/Ross defeated Spain'sLiliana Fernández Steiner andElsa Baquerizo McMillan in straight sets (21–16, 21–16) to win the gold medal.[20]
Competing at the World Tour Finals in Toronto, playing in Pool A they are in 1st with a 2-0 and advance to quarter finals.
In 2017, Walsh Jennings announced she was not signing a new contract with AVP because of disagreements with the organization. Ross re-signed with the AVP. She and Walsh Jennings ended their partnership.[21] Walsh Jennings then reteamed withNicole Branagh, with whom she briefly competed during May-Treanor's 2010 break from beach volleyball.[22]
In October 2018 Walsh Jennings announces she would be partnering with Brooke Sweat in hopes of qualifying for the Tokyo Games in 2020.Brooke Sweat is a defensive specialist, she has won defensive player of the year on the AVP (Association of Volleyball Professionals) tour four times. The pair failed to qualify for the games which were postponed until 2021.[23][24]
Walsh played in the2000 Summer Olympics as anopposite hitter on the U.S. women's indoor team, earning a fourth-place finish.[25]She missed several of her first games due to a false positive on a drug test, which indicated a suspicious epitestosterone to testosterone ratio. After being retested, Walsh was cleared of any wrongdoing and allowed to continue playing.[26]
At the2004 Summer Olympics, Walsh andMisty May-Treanor won the gold medal inwomen's beach volleyball without losing a single set in all seven Olympic matches.

On August 21, 2008, Walsh Jennings andMay-Treanor repeated as Olympic gold medalists, defeating the first-seeded Chinese team in the final match (they would have been first-seeded, but home rule put them in the #2 spot with China as the #1).May-Treanor and Walsh did not lose a set in either of the past two Olympics. Their final match extended their unbeaten streak to 108 matches.
Walsh and May-Treanor competed together for the last time in the2012 Summer Olympics in London. After first and second round wins, they continued their Olympic win streak of 32 consecutive sets without a loss until losing the first set of three to Austria in a preliminary round before ultimately winning the match, 17–21; 21–8; 15–10.[27] The pair faced China in the semi-finals, where they won a hard-fought victory over Xue Chen and Zhang Xi 22–20, 22–20 to reach the finals.[27] In an all USA final they defeated fellow AmericansJen Kessy andApril Ross, 21–16, 21–16 to win the gold medal. The victory placed Walsh and May-Treanor as one of the few athletes to have won the gold medal in three consecutive Olympiads.
Walsh Jennings partnered withApril Ross for the2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. The pair reached the semi-finals, where they fell to Brazil'sÁgatha Bednarczuk andBárbara Seixas in two hard fought sets, (22-20, 21–18).[28] In the bronze medal match, Walsh Jennings and Ross faced the number one ranked team ofLarissa França/Talita Antunes from Brazil. This was the match many thought would be played for the gold medal, but Larissa and Talita had been upset in the semifinals by Germany's Laura Ludwig and Kira Walkenhorst, throwing the two top teams into the bronze medal match. Walsh Jennings and Ross dropped the first set and were down by three in the second before coming back to win, 17–21, 21–17, 15–9. The bronze medal was Walsh Jennings's fourth Olympic medal, making her the most decorated beach volleyball player–male or female–in Olympic history.[29]

In February 2006, Walsh Jennings had a guest-starring role in an episode ofCSI: Miami along with several other AVP Volleyball players.[30]
Walsh Jennings hosts a weekly, one-hour radio show onSirius Satellite Radio's Faction 28 station. It airs every Sunday at 9 AM Eastern time.
Walsh Jennings appeared in the Game Show Network television showExtreme Dodgeball. She was a member of the Detroit Spoilers, who lost all ten games they played.
Walsh Jennings also appeared alongside her volleyball partnerMisty May-Treanor on the showShaq Vs. in August 2009.
Walsh appeared in theESPN The Magazine "Body Issue", with images taken both before and after giving birth to her third child.[31]
Walsh appeared in the twelfth season ofHell's Kitchen where she gave the team challenge winner a private volleyball lesson.
In 2015, Walsh Jennings and her husband appeared onCelebrity Wife Swap. She swapped places withTami Roman from the television showBasketball Wives.
In the wake of the outbreak of COVID-19, Walsh has expressed disagreement with mask mandates resulting in criticism from those who believe such protests help the spread of the disease.[32]
In 2005, Walsh married fellow American pro beach-volleyball playerCasey Jennings.[33] They have three children, two sons and a daughter.[34] Walsh was five weeks pregnant during the 2012 London Summer Olympics.[35][36]
Walsh trained on the sand split betweenHermosa Beach andManhattan Beach in Los Angeles, California, and from 2002 did additional training in the gym at O.C. Fast-Twitch with trainer Tommy Knox.[37]

{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)| Sporting positions | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Women's FIVB Beach World Tour Winner alongside 2002 | Succeeded by |
| Awards | ||
| Preceded by Inaugural | Women's FIVB World Tour "Best Blocker" 2005–2008 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's FIVB World Tour "Best Blocker" 2011–2012 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's FIVB World Tour "Best Blocker" 2014 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by Inaugural | Women's FIVB World Tour "Best Hitter" 2005–2007 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's FIVB World Tour "Best Hitter" 2012 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's FIVB World Tour "Best Hitter" 2016 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's FIVB World Tour "Best Attacker" alongside 2007 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's FIVB World Tour "Best Attacker" 2014 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's FIVB World Tour "Most Inspirational" 2011–2012 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's FIVB World Tour "Most Inspirational" 2014 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's FIVB World Tour "Most Outstanding" 2007 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's FIVB World Tour "Most Outstanding" 2012–2014 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by Inaugural | Women's FIVB World Tour "Sportsperson" 2005–2008 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's FIVB World Tour "Sportsperson" 2012 | Succeeded by |