Six Former or Current Athletes Connected to U of A Win Medals at Paris Olympics

Clockwise from top left: Olympic gold medalists Chris Bailey, Kaylyn Brown, Kelsey Plum and Roje Stona.
Razorback Athletics and Michael Steele/Getty Images

Clockwise from top left: Olympic gold medalists Chris Bailey, Kaylyn Brown, Kelsey Plum and Roje Stona.

Current and alumni Razorback athletes and one former graduate student garnered four gold medals, two silver medals and two bronze medals during the 2024 Olympiad in Paris, France. It was the U of A's highest medal count since Razorbacks began winning medals in 1948. A group of professional athletes who train at Fayetteville also received a total of seven medals: four gold, two silver and a bronze.

If the medals won by U of A athletes were combined with those won by professional athletes who train in Fayetteville, they would have placed at No. 14 in the Olympic medal count, just behind Canada and Uzbekistan.

Razorback Medalists

image of jamaican flagRoje Stona, competing for Jamaica, broke the Olympic record for discus with a gold-medal winning throw of 229 feet, 8 inches (70.00 meters) at the Stade de France. Stona became Jamaica’s first gold medalist in a field event. “It’s a great feeling, it’s what I’ve been praying for and what I’ve been dreaming of,” Stona said. "To come here and actually do it, it’s the best feeling in my life."

Through the final three rounds, Stona was in seventh place. "It doesn’t get any more difficult than that," he said. "I knew I had nothing to lose so I just went for it.” His throw improved on the world record by 2 inches.


image of American flagKelsey Plum, a former graduate student and grad assistant for the Razorbacks women's basketball team, won her second Olympic gold medal as part of this year's U.S. women's Olympic basketball team. The U.S. team narrowly squeaked by France in the final game, 67-66. In 2021, Plum helped the United States win the first-ever Olympic gold medal awarded in 3x3 basketball when the sport was introduced. She currently plays for the Las Vegas Aces in the WNBA, which won national championships in 2022 and 2023.


image of American flagRazorback sprinter Kaylyn Brown of the United States collected Olympic gold and silver medals as a member of the U.S. relay teams in the world-record-setting women's 4x400-meter team and its mixed 4 x 400-meter relay team, respectively. Brown's split was 49.14 as the anchor leg for the United States during the preliminary competition, and the team set a world record in that preliminary round. 


image of jamaican flagAlumnus Wayne Pinnock, competing for Jamaica, won the silver medal in the men's Olympic long jump with a leap of 27 feet, 5.25 inches (8.36 meters) in the second round. “Words can’t explain the feeling,” Pinnock said. “I’ve always wanted to be an Olympian. My dream has really come through with a silver medal. Unfortunately, I didn’t get gold, but it’s all in God’s plan.”


image of American flagChris Bailey, a Razorback alumnus who still trains at Fayetteville, led off the U.S. men's 4x400-meter relay team, which won gold with finished sixth in the men's 400-meter race with a time of 44.58. During semi-final qualifying rounds, Bailey ran a career best time of 44.31 during his split.


image of United Kingdom flagSimilarly, Amber Anning picked up two bronze medals as a relay team member for Great Britain's mixed 4x400-meter relay team and its women's 4x400-meter relay team. Anning ran the anchor leg for Great Britain's 4x400-meter relay, which also won bronze. Anning also set the British national record in the 400-meter race with a time of 49.29 seconds, placing fifth overall on a wet track surface and just 1/100th of a second behind fourth-place Rhasidat Adeleke of Ireland.


U of A Competitors

image of jamaican flagRomaine Beckford, a senior this year who swept NCAA high jump titles indoors and outdoors, finished in the men's high jump finals, competing for Jamaica. 

image of American flagRazorback alumna Taliyah Brooks, who still trains in Fayetteville, finished 11th overall with a score of 6,258 points in the women'sheptathlon competing for the United States. While at Arkansas, she won the NCAA pentathlon championship.

image of Colombia flagFormer Razorback Nico Echavarria represented his native Colombia at the 2024 Olympics in the men's golf competition, finishing tied for 35th with four other competitors. Echavarria was an All-American during the 2013 season.

image of Mexico flagAlumna Maria Fassi, representing Mexico, finished in 58th place in the women's golf competition. Fassi, the 2019 NCAA champion, also competed in the delayed Tokyo Olympics in 2021.

image of American flagRachel Glenn, a red-shirt sophomore and two-time NCAA champion, finished in eighth place in the women's high jump, competing for the United States.

image of jamaican flagCompeting for Jamaica, the 19-year-old Razorback alumnus Jaydon Hibbert, winner of The Bowerman trophy in 2023, finished fourth in the men's triple jump, just an inch behind the bronze medalist, Andy Diaz Hernandez of Italy.

image of American flagAlumna Nikki Hiltz took seventh in the women's 1,500-meter final with a time of 3:56.38 with fellow American Elle St. Pierre finishing right behind in eighth. During U.S. Olympic Team Trials, Hiltz set a new American record for the 1,500-meter race with a time of 3:55.33.

image of United Kingdom flagAnna Hopkin, who competed in swimming for the Razorbacks and earned a master's degree in kinesiology at the U of A, raced in four swim events, finishing seventh overall in two team events with Great Britain's women's 4x100-meter freestyle relay and the mixed 4x100-meter medley relay. She also finished 10th in the women's 50-meter freestyle race and 11th in the 100-meter race. She was part of the British relay team that won the gold medal in 2021 at the Tokyo Olympics.

Current Razorback Sanu Jallow, who just finished her sophomore year, represented her home country of The Gambia in the women's 800-meter race but failed to advance after round one of the competition.

image of Mexico flagAlumna Gaby Lopez returned to Olympic golfing this summer but finished out of competition for medals. Lopez finished tied for 29th with five other golfers. Lopez was runner-up for the 2015 NCAA Championship and was playing in her third Olympics.

Alumna Shafiqua Maloney, the first athlete from St. Vincent and the Grenadines to reach an Olympic finals, was less than a quarter second away from medaling in the 800-meter final. She finished fourth with a time of 1:57.66 in the race.

image of jamaican flagAlumna Ackera Nugent, competing for Jamaica, made it to the finals of the women's 100-meter hurdles but did not finish after hitting her first hurdle and never recovering for the rest of the race. Nugent was the 2023 NCAA champion for the Razorbacks.

Ayden Owens-Delerme finished the men's decathlon with a final score of 8,437 points that placed the Arkansas alumnus ninth overall in his Olympic debut. He represented Puerto Rico at the Olympics.

image of Jamaican flagNickisha Pryce, the Jamaican national record holder in the 400-meter race, made it to the semi-finals but failed to advance to the finals, which were won by Marileidy Paulino of the Dominican Republic.

image of American flagJoscelyn Roberson, who will start classes in a couple of weeks, was chosen as a traveling alternate athlete for the U.S. women's gymnastics team going to the Olympics, but didn't see competition.

Alumna Tina Šutej, who won the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championship in 2011 and finished fifth in the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, finished 19th in the women's pole vault for her native Slovenia

image of American flagIncoming transfer Isabella Whittaker qualified for the U.S. Olympic team's 4x400 relay pool, a group of six runners who were available to run in the U.S. team's relay races.

Athletes Who Train at Fayetteville

In addition to current Razorback athletes and alumni, the following 10 competitors with ties to the U of A or Fayetteville also qualified:

  • Ryan Crouser, a volunteer assistant coach for the Razorbacks, became the first athlete to win three gold medals in the shotput. He won gold medals previously in Rio and Tokyo, and holds the world record in shotput. 
  • Tara Davis-Woodhall, who trains in Fayetteville after competed for Georgia and Texas as a collegian, won gold in the women's long jump. Her husband, Hunter Woodhall, competed for the Razorbacks and was a 200-meter silver medalist in the 2016 Paralympics and two-time bronze medalist in 2016 and 2021.
  • Anna Cockrell, who trains at Fayetteville, placed second in the women's 400-meter hurdles for the Olympic silver medal.
  • Shamier Little, an Arkansas volunteer assistant and two-time silver medalist in the World Championships, and Alexis Holmes, a professional runner training in Fayetteville, were part of the U.S. 4x400-meter relay team that set an American record while winning gold. Holmes also finished sixth in the 400-meter race.
  • Brittany Brown, a professional runner who trains in Fayetteville, won bronze in the women's 200-meter race, competing for the United States.
  • Andranette Knight, who trains in Fayetteville, was part of Jamaica's relay pool for the women's 4x400-meter relay, which placed fourth, and the mixed 4x400-meter relay.
  • Jah-Nhai Perinchief, who trains at Fayetteville and was the flag bearer for Bermuda during the Opening Ceremony, competed in the men's triple jump but didn't make it to the finals.
  • Cindy Sember, who trains in Fayetteville, represent Great Britain in the women's 100-meter hurdles but was not able to finish during a semifinal race or advance to the finals.
  • Gianna Woodruff represented Panama for a second time in the Olympic Games. She placed seventh in the 400-meter hurdles at the Tokyo Olympics. In Paris, she competed through the first round but was unable to move to the finals.

PREVIOUS MEDALISTS

U of A athletes, students and alumni have won 37 Olympic and Paralympic medals through 2024:

2024 – Paris
Chris Bailey – Olympics 4x400 Relay – Gold
Kaylyn Brown – Olympics 4x400 Relay – Gold
Kelsey Plum – Olympics 5x5 Basketball – Gold
Roje Stona – Olympics Discus – Gold
Hunter Woodhall – Paralympics T-62 400-meter – Gold
Kaylyn Brown – Olympics Mixed 4x400 Relay – Silver
Wayne Pinnock – Olympics Long Jump – Silver
Amber Anning – Olympics 4x400 Relay – Bronze
Amber Anning – Olympics Mixed 4x400 Relay – Bronze
Hunter Woodhall – Paralympics 4x100-meter Universal Relay – Bronze

2020 (2021) – Tokyo
Anna Hopkin – Olympics 4x100 Mixed Medley Swim Relay – Gold
Kelsey Plum – Olympics 3x3 Basketball – Gold
Hunter Woodhall – Paralympics 400-meter Dash – Bronze

2016 – Rio de Janeiro
Taylor Ellis-Watson – Olympics 4x400 Relay – Gold
Omar McLeod – Olympics 110-meter Hurdles – Gold
Sandi Morris – Olympics Pole Vault – Silver
Veronica Campbell-Brown – Olympics 4x100 Relay – Silver
Hunter Woodhall – Paralympics 200-meter dash – Silver
Hunter Woodhall – Paralympics 400-meter dash – Bronze

2012 – London
Veronica Campbell-Brown – Olympics 100 meters – Bronze
Veronica Campbell-Brown – Olympics 4x100 Relay – Silver

2008 – Beijing
Veronica Campbell-Brown – Olympics 200 meters – Gold

2004 – Athens
Veronica Campbell-Brown – Olympics 100 meters – Bronze
Veronica Campbell-Brown – Olympics 200 meters – Gold
Veronica Campbell-Brown – Olympics 4x100 Relay – Gold
Deena Drossin Kastor – Olympics Marathon – Bronze
Matt Hemingway – Olympics High Jump – Silver

2000 – Sydney
Veronica Campbell-Brown – Olympics 4x100 Relay – Silver
John Register — Paralympics long jump — Silver

1996 – Atlanta
Calvin Davis – Olympics 400-meter Hurdles – Bronze

1992 – Barcelona
Mike Conley Sr. – Olympics Triple Jump – Gold

1984 – Los Angeles
Joe Kleine – Olympics Basketball – Gold
Alvin Robertson – Olympics Basketball – Gold
Mike Conley Sr. – Olympics Triple Jump – Silver

1948 – London
Clyde Scott – Olympics 110-meter Hurdles – Silver
Gordon Carpenter – Olympics Basketball – Gold
R.C. Pitts – Olympics Basketball – Gold

 
Contacts

Charlie Alison, executive editor
University Relations
479-575-6731, calison@uark.edu

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