¹ú²ú̽»¨ is set to welcome a large ‪‬‬contingent of 2016 Rio Olympians home. The last of the group, comprising students, Scholarship recipients and ‪¹ú²ú̽»¨ Sport ‬‬Club members, completed their events over the weekend.
Read this ¹ú²ú̽»¨ News story for the full list of athletes.
Results:
Caitlin Sargent: The Bachelor of Physiotherapy graduate and ¹ú²ú̽»¨ Athletics Club member finished eighth in the final of the Women’s 4x400m Relay. The team of Sargent, Anneliese Rubie, Jessica Thornton and Morgan Mitchell was the first Australian Women’s 4x400m squad to reach an Olympic final since Sydney 2000.
Pita Taufatofua (Tonga): The Bachelor of Engineering graduate lost 16-1 to Iran’s Sajjad Mardani in the opening round of the Men’s Taekwondo (over 80kg) event. Pita drew worldwide attention at the Rio 2016 opening ceremony as Tonga’s flag-bearer.
Bianca Hammett: The Bachelor of Applied Science student captained Australia’s Synchronised Swimming Team to eighth-place finishes in both the Team Technical and Team Free Routine events.
Danielle Prince: The Bachelor of Health, Sport and Physical Education student and Clem Jones Sporting Scholarship recipient finished 25th in the Rhythmic Gymnastics Women's Individual All-Around event with a total score of 61.016. Of the four routines (hoop, ball, clubs and ribbon), Danielle performed best with clubs, posting a score of 15.71.
Alana Boyd: Competing at her third Olympics, the Bachelor of Business Management graduate finished fourth in the Women’s Pole Vault. Alana cleared 4.80m in the final – the same height as New Zealand’s bronze medal winner Eliza McCartney – but missed out on a medal on a count back. The mark was one centimetre shy of her national record of 4.81m.
Dane Bird-Smith: The Bachelor of Health, Sport and Physical Education student has won bronze in the Men's 20km Walk. The ¹ú²ú̽»¨ Sports Achievement Scholarship holder and ¹ú²ú̽»¨ Athletics Club member – who is coached by father and dual-Olympian, Dave Smith – thrived on his Olympics debut, setting a personal best time of 1:19:37 to finish a mere 23 seconds behind China’s Wang Zhen, who won the gold medal.
Maddison Keeney: The ¹ú²ú̽»¨ Bachelor of Science student won a bronze medal in the Women’s 3m Synchronised Springboard event. Competing in her first Olympic Games, ¹ú²ú̽»¨ Sports Achievement Scholarship recipient Keeney and teammate Anabelle Smith trailed for much of the event, before a final round dive lifted the duo into third place. The pair finished on 299.19 points to deny Canada bronze by 0.87 of a point. China claimed gold ahead of Italy. In the individual Women’s 3m Springboard final, Maddison took fifth place with a final score of 349.65 – 23 points shy of a second bronze medal.
Fiona Albert: The Bachelor of Laws and Bachelor of Arts graduate was part of Australia’s Women’s Eight rowing team which finished seventh overall. Dubbed ‘The Lateful Eight’ after being called up to compete nine days out from the Games, the Australian squad missed out on the finals following a fifth place finish in the repechage.
Ashley Stoddart: Competing in her first Olympics, the Bachelor of Occupational Therapy Honours student finished ninth overall in the Women’s Laser Radial. Ashley’s best finish was equal second (classified third) in the double-points medal race.
Josh Robinson: The ¹ú²ú̽»¨ Athletics Club member and Bachelor of Commerce/Bachelor of Engineering graduate finished 13th (80.84m) in the Men's Javelin, narrowly missing the final by one position.
Con Foley and Nick Malouf: Australia’s Men’s Sevens team – consisting of ¹ú²ú̽»¨ Rugby Club members Nick Malouf, Bachelor of Commerce/Bachelor of Laws student and Con Foley – were beaten in the quarter-finals after losing 22-5 to South Africa.
Emilee Cherry: Australia’s Women’s Sevens Rugby team – featuring Emilee Cherry – are the sport’s first-ever Olympic champions after defeating New Zealand in the gold medal match. Emilee, who studied a Bachelor of Health, Sport and Physical Education at ¹ú²ú̽»¨, starred for Australia in the Aussie Pearls team on a dramatic final day of competition. The 2013/2014 World Rugby Women’s Sevens Player of the Year scored two tries in Australia’s 17-5 semi-final win over Canada, and played a key role in the final, with the Aussie Pearls easing to a 24-17 win in the historic decider.
Michael Hepburn: Australia’s Men’s Team Pursuit foursome – consisting of Michael Hepburn – claimed a silver medal. Hepburn, who used to study a Bachelor of Human Movement Studies at ¹ú²ú̽»¨, helped Australia to a big lead midway through the gold medal race against Great Britain. But the world record-setting British squad – featuring Sir Bradley Wiggins and Mark Cavendish – stormed home in the final stages to claim gold. The medal adds to the Team Pursuit silver Michael won at the 2012 London Games.
Cedric Dubler: The 21-year-old ¹ú²ú̽»¨ Athletics Club Member finished 14th overall in the 10-event Men’s Decathlon.Cedric posted personal best times in both the 400m (48.18 seconds) and 1500m (4:32:12) races, and equalled his best-ever Pole Vault jump (4.90m).
Emma Moffatt: The 31-year-old, who studied a Bachelor of Applied Science at ¹ú²ú̽»¨, finished sixth in the Women’s Triathlon in a time of 1:57:55 – 54 seconds behind Great Britain bronze medallist Vicky Holland. Emma is Australia’s first-ever triple-Olympian in Triathlon.
Media: Caroline Bird, ¹ú²ú̽»¨ Communications, c.bird1@uq.edu.au or 07 3365 1130.