Black Ferns Sevens player Jazmin Felix-Hotham (middle) celebrates winning the gold medal at the Paris Olympics at Stade de France, Paris. Photo / Photosport
Waikato connected athletes contributed to 13 of New Zealand’s 20 medals at the Paris Olympics 2024.
Dame Lisa Carrington, with family ties to Te Awamutu, won three gold medals, totalling eight career golds.
Cambridge’s Brooke Francis and Lucy Spoors won gold in women’s double sculls, defeating Romania’s champions.
Granted some of these competitors moved to the region to study or to better their training, while others have family roots in the province or were born there.
According to Infometrics, a leading New Zealand economic consultancy, the Waikato population was at 522,600 in 2023. This works out to a ratio of one gold medal per 74,657 people or one medal per 40,200.
Infometrics put the New Zealand population at 5,223,100 in 2023 – one gold medal every 522,310 (almost the population of Waikato) and one medal per 261,155 people.
The young mother duo beat reigning Olympic and world champions Ancuta Bodnar and Simona Radis of Romania at Vaires-sur-Marne Nautical Stadium.
Hamilton Girls’ High School alumnae Jazmin Felix-Hotham, Manaia Nuku, Kelsey Teneti and Tenika Willison were involved in the gold medal winning Black Ferns Sevens side alongside Chiefs Manawa alumni Stacey Waaka (also Waikato Rugby) and Portia Woodman-Wickliffe.
It was also New Zealand’s most successful track cycling campaign (two gold, two silver, one bronze) and Te Awamutu Sports Cycling alumnae were involved in all five medals.