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Nina Kennedy


EVENTS:  Pole Vault


AGE:  26 (DOB 5 Apr 1997)


COACH: Paul Burgess


CLUB: UWA Athletics Club


STATE:  WA


AUSTRAIAN TEAM SENIOR DEBUT: 2015 World Championships


PERSONAL BESTS: 4.90m (Budapest HUN, 23 Aug 2023)

BIOGRAPHY


After two contrasting international seasons in 2021 and 2022 Nina Kennedy has been terrific in her delayed start to her 2023 season. After a challenging Tokyo Olympic Games campaign, Nina’s 2022 season was brilliant with bronze at the world championships, Commonwealth gold and a win in the Diamond League final. She had placed in the top-3 in 11 of 12 meets and 1st or 2nd in her four Diamond Leagues.

In early October 2022, after a short end of season break, Nina returned to training but had a sore back. Scans showed a fracture in the L5 vertebra, resulting in a four-week rest before she slowly resumed training. After missing the domestic season she opened her 2023 campaign in Doha in May. At the next two Diamond League meets in June, she was back to her very best with third in Florence and 1st in Paris in a season’s best of 4.77m.

The Budapest World Championships is Nina’s third world championships and 7th senior Australian team.

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Nina Kennedy was born in Busselton, three-hours south of Perth, but completed primary school in Perth where she joined her first club Perry Lakes Little Athletics, aged 11, because she loved the athletics day in primary school. She started pole vaulting a year later when she was 12 after a pole vault coach talent identification her at an athletics meet.

In 2012, aged 14, Nina Kennedy placed second in the senior Australian pole vault championships with a PB of 4.10m. She progressed in 2013, setting a best of 4.31m and placing fifth at the IAAF World Youth (U18) Championships. At the 2014 IAAF World Juniors, she vaulted a PB 4.40m, just missing a medal finishing fourth. 

In February 2015 in Perth, she made a massive breakthrough in one competition. She raised her PB three times in the one competition, clearing 4.43m, then 4.50m and finally 4.59m – a world junior record. This mark qualified her for the IAAF world championships in Beijing, where unfortunately she no heighted in her senior debut. She suffered the same fate at the 2016 IAAF World Juniors. 

In March 2017 she qualified for the IAAF world championships in London, but less than two weeks before the world championships she withdrew battling a quad injury.  She wrote on Instagram: “Deciding to withdraw from World Champs has broken me, I’m speechless. Onwards and upwards nevertheless. Thank you to everyone in my support team + good luck to the Aussie team.”

Three years on from her brilliant 2015 season as a 17-year-old, Kennedy was better than ever in 2018. She first raised her PB to 4.60m and a week later moved to number three Australian all-time with a vault of 4.71m. At the National championships she vaulted an excellent 4.60m, as she defeated New Zealand’s Olympic bronze medallist Eliza McCartney, who no heighted. At the Gold Coast Commonwealth Games she won bronze. She was injured six weeks prior to the Games and only had two vault sessions – an achievement she regards as the best moment in her sporting career.

Injury dominated 2019 with quad, hamstring and glute tears, plus spine/back troubles. 

She also battled mental health. “There were stages where I was so low I physically couldn’t complete of even start any of my training sessions,” wrote Kennedy.

Pre-COVID in early 2020, Kennedy was back to her best, clearing her second best ever height of 4.61m. Over the summer of 2020/21, she was incredibly consistent with eight consecutive competition at 4.70m or higher. The form led to her raising the Australian record to 4.82m at the Sydney Track Classic.

It was a terrific summer season for Nina Kennedy in 2021 but her preparation for the Olympics were marred by injury and COVID-19 disruptions.
At the nationals she tore my calf in the warm-up, but was still determined to compete. “I kept jumping through it, which made it worse. I jumped 4.75m there and I won, which was an automatic selection for the Olympics. That was a big rehab, it was four to five weeks,” said Nina. Then mid-year during her last session before she was due to travel to Queensland for her training and preparation for the Olympics, she injured her abductor - an 8cm tear. 
But Nina did her best to remained positive in the leadup to Tokyo. Returning from the abductor, she did her quad in two different places.
The final challenge for Nina was when she found herself in a window-less room in the days leading up to the Olympic pole vault, having been involved in a COVID-19 scare. She was forced to isolate away from the Olympic village just days out from competition after having been at the same training venue as American pole vaulter Sam Kendricks, who would later test positive for COVID.
“That took such a mental toll. With my mental demons and being locked in this room, it wasn’t great. I was very, very close to pulling out. That would have been the easier thing to do.”

But Nina, battled on, making it to the event in an empty Olympic stadium. She cleared 4.40m, but missed her attempts at 4.55m in the rain-effect competition.
“The fact that I even got out there and I was standing on the runway was a sigh of relief,” Nina said.

After a 10 week break, in November she was back in to training, and enjoying her return to the sport.
“I’ve dealt with Tokyo, that’s in the past so it’s full steam to the Commonwealth Games and World Champs.”

Nina returned to competition in Perth in early 2022 vaulting 4.70m and 4.60m in two competitions ahead of winning her third National title in April. She had some promising results in the lead up to the World Championships and Commonwealth Games placing second at the Rabat Diamond League and winning in Turku. 

Her excellent lead-up form continued into the Eugene World Championships. Smoothly through the qualifying round, she stumbled at her opening height in the final (4.45m) requiring three attempt to proceed, but then she produced a clean sheet of first attempts at 4.60m, 4.70m and 4.80m, as the competition gradually fell away. With only three athletes remaining in the competition, she was guaranteed a medal, eventually settling for bronze after unsuccessful attempts at 4.85m and 4.90m. Her medal was just the second by an Australian in the event.

Her Eugene performance launched her into a brilliant end of season campaign. Two weeks after the world championships she won the Commonwealth Games title with a leap of 4.60m. This was followed by a win at the Monaco Diamond League, second in Lausanne and a win in the final in Zurich with a season best of 4.81m. She became just the fifth Aussie to become a Diamond League champion. It was also a wildcard entry for the 2023 World Championships. During the breakout year she had placed in the top-3 in 11 of 12 meets and 1st or 2nd in her four Diamond Leagues.

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Biggest challenge: The biggest challenge I’ve faced in the sport and out of the sport is my mental health. I’ve had a few occurrences of major depression. There were stages where I was so low I physically couldn’t complete of even start any of my training sessions…Most influential: The people closest to me. I’ve never really had a sporting hero - people inspire me because of their whole selves. My family, my coach Paul Burgess, my friends, my training partners and other athletes I know on a personal level inspire me.

@ August 2023 david.tarbotton@athletics.org.au

World Athletics Profile https://worldathletics.org/athletes/australia/nina-kennedy-14407592