Huge Australian team for world athletics championships

John Salvado |

With the world watching, Gout Gout will make his senior global championships debut in Tokyo.
With the world watching, Gout Gout will make his senior global championships debut in Tokyo.

Six Paris Olympics medallists and the very best of a red-hot generation next headline a record Australian team of 88 for the upcoming world athletics championships in Tokyo.

Reigning Olympic pole vault gold medallist and defending world champ Nina Kennedy and high jump gold medal favourite Nicola Olyslagers are among the biggest names in a star-studded squad announced on  Wednesday.

Schoolboy sprint sensation Gout Gout will make his senior global championships debut in the 200m as one of eight medallists from last year’s world juniors in Peru taking the big step up to the Tokyo squad.

World junior long jump champ Delta Amidzovski also snuck into the team at the last moment.

The Australian team for the September 13-21 event is even larger than the 86-strong track and field outfit which wore the green and gold on home soil at the 2000 Sydney Olympics.

The 2025 squad is peppered with genuine medal chances, none more so than Olsylagers, who sits atop the 2025 world rankings after setting a national record of 2.04m at last week’s Diamond League final in Zurich.

“This season has been a great build-up for Tokyo. I do want to do another personal best, but I haven’t put a limit on what that is because I want to trust God for the greater heights,” Olyslagers said.

“My life changed forever the last time I competed in Tokyo for the Olympics (when she won silver in 2021), so even sharing that stadium this time with my family and friends will be a moment I’ll never forget.”

Nicola Olsylagers.
Nicola Olyslagers took the honours at the 2025 Diamond League final. (AP PHOTO)

After undergoing major hamstring surgery in April, Kennedy will be making her 2025 season debut in Tokyo, but still reckons she can challenge for a spot on the podium.

The only Paris Games medallist missing out this time around is walker Jemima Montag, who had hamstring surgery last week.

The most prominent athlete to miss out was reigning Commonwealth 1500m champ Olli Hoare, with Jude Thomas and Adam Spencer preferred alongside the pre-selected young gun Cameron Myers.

Despite the late withdrawal of sub-10 second man Lachlan Kennedy with a back injury, the sprint stocks are strong, headed by Gout in the 200m, evergreen Rohan Browning in the 100m and Torrie Lewis, who is doubling up in the women’s 100m and 200m.

For the first time ever, Australia will also be represented in all five relays – although Gout will only contest the individual 200m because school commitments this year meant he did not have time to join the relay program.

Rohan Browning.
Rohan Browning, racing here at the Paris Olympics, will contest the 100m and 4x100m relay in Tokyo. (Dean Lewins/AAP PHOTOS)

“We’ve witnessed a real shift, not just in performance, but in national relevance,” said Australian high performance boss Andrew Faichney.

“This team reflects that change. They’re world-class athletes with the results to match, but just as importantly, they’re carrying the momentum of a sport that has so much belief behind it.”

There is still one appeal to be decided in the women’s 5000m.

MEN

100m: Joshua Azzopardi, Rohan Browning

200m: Gout Gout, Calab Law, Aidan Murphy

400m: Reece Holder, Cooper Sherman

800m: Peter Bol, Peyton Craig, Luke Boyes

1500m: Cameron Myers, Jude Thomas, Adam Spencer

5000m: Ky Robinson, Jack Rayner, Seth O’Donnell

3000m steeplechase: Ed Trippas

High jump: Yual Reath, Brandon Starc, Roman Anastasios

Pole vault: Kurtis Marschall

Long jump: Liam Adcock, Christopher Mitrevski

Triple jump: Connor Murphy

Discus: Matthew Denny

Javelin: Cameron McEntyre

Marathon: Andrew Buchanan, Tim Vincent, Liam Boudin

20km race walk: Rhydian Cowley, Declan Tingay, Tim Fraser

35km race walk: Cowley, Will Thompson, Mitchell Baker

4x100m relay: Azzopardi, Jacob Despard, Christopher Ius, Law, Browning, Connor Bond

4x400m relay: Holder, Sherman, Aidan Murphy, Thomas Reynolds, Terrell Thorne, Luke van Ratingen, Augustine Nketia Jr

WOMEN

100m: Bree Rizzo, Torrie Lewis, Ella Connolly

200m: Lewis, Mia Gross, Kristie Edwards

400m: Ellie Beer

800m: Abbey Caldwell, Claudia Hollingsworth, Jessica Hull

1500m: Sarah Billings, Linden Hall, Hull

5000m: Rose Davies, Hall, Georgia Griffith, Lauren Ryan (one to be omitted after appeal)

10,000m: Ryan, Isobel Batt-Doyle

100m hurdles: Liz Clay

400m hurdles: Sarah Carli, Alanah Yukich

3000m steeplechase: Cara Feain-Ryan, Amy Cashin

High jump: Nicola Olyslagers, Eleanor Patterson, Emily Whelan

Pole vault: Nina Kennedy

Long jump: Samantha Dale, Delta Amidzovski

Triple jump: Desleigh Owusu

Discus: Taryn Gollshewsky

Hammer throw: Stephanie Ratcliffe, Lara Roberts

Javelin: Mackenzie Little, Lianna Davidson

Marathon: Vanessa Wilson, Sarah Klein, Tara Palm

20km race walk: Rebecca Henderson, Elizabeth McMillen, Alexandra Griffin

35km race walk: Olivia Sandery, Henderson, Allanah Pitcher

Heptathlon: Camryn Newton-Smith, Tori West

4x100m relay: Connolly, Edwards, Lewis, Rizzo, Georgia Harris, Leah O’Brien

4x400m relay: Beer, Yukich, Gross, Carla Bull, Jemma Pollard,  Carli, Amelia Rowe

* Mixed 4x400m relay TBA from squad

AAP