Parker’s Paralympic Gold Leads Aussie Triathlon’s Night of Nights

Paralympic champion Lauren Parker headlined the celebration at the 2024 AusTriathlon Awards, capping off her remarkable year with a fifth consecutive Female Para Triathlon Performance award. The recognition follows her historic gold medal at the Paris Paralympics and adds to an impressive collection of honours including AIS Performance of the Year and Paralympics Australia’s Athlete of the Year.

“This award means so much because it really shows the recognition of my results and performances this year,” Parker said. “It’s been such a hard three years since Tokyo, to then get to Paris and come away with a para triathlon gold medal, and then to receive this award just means the world.”

Historic Champions Jacobs and Kelly Join Triathlon’s Greatest

Pete Jacobs and Katie Kelly OAM inducted into AusTriathlon Hall of Fame, honoring his historic Kona victory and her groundbreaking Paralympic gold medal.

The awards ceremony, held at the QT Gold Coast, also witnessed a historic moment as Pete Jacobs and Katie Kelly OAM were inducted into the AusTriathlon Hall of Fame. The pair became the 19th and 20th inductees, with Jacobs honoured for his legendary 2012 Kona victory – the last time an Australian claimed the Ironman World Championship title – and Kelly recognised for her groundbreaking Paralympic gold in Rio 2016, where she secured Australia’s first-ever Paralympic medal in the sport.

Matt Hauser proved why he’s one of Australia’s most respected athletes, claiming both Male Performance of the Year and the Athlete’s Athlete award. His season highlights included victory at the World Triathlon Championship Series Hamburg, silver in Yokohama, and Australia’s best male Olympic triathlon result in 20 years with seventh place in Paris.

Ashleigh Gentle continued her dominance, securing a record-breaking fifth Female Performance of the Year title. Her victories at the T100 Triathlon World Tour events in Singapore and London propelled her to World Championship silver, cementing her status as one of Australia’s most successful triathletes.

The future of Australian para triathlon looks bright with 17-year-old Grace Brimelow making history as just the second para athlete to receive the Chris Hewitt Emerging Athlete Award. Brimelow, who became Australia’s youngest Paralympic triathlete in Paris, backed up her selection with gold at the World Triathlon Para Series in Devonport.

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