Nicola Olyslagers
- In full:
- Nicola Lauren Olyslagers
- Née:
- McDermott
- Born:
- December 28, 1996, North Gosford, New South Wales, Australia (age 27)
- Also Known As:
- Nicola McDermott
- Nicola Lauren Olyslagers
Nicola Olyslagers (born December 28, 1996, North Gosford, New South Wales, Australia) is the first Australian woman to jump 2 meters (6 feet 6.74 inches) in the high jump. At the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games (held in 2021 because of the COVID-19 pandemic), the track-and-field athlete earned a silver medal and set a personal best record with a jump of 2.02 meters (6 feet 7.53 inches). Olyslagers won another silver medal at the 2024 Paris Games.
Early life and education
Nicola Lauren McDermott, who is half-Croatian, was taller than many of her peers while growing up and initially found sports difficult. However, she discovered a love for track-and-field events when she was seven years old, and she enjoyed participating in the high jump from the first time she tried it. At age eight, after finding out that the women’s record for the high jump at that time was 1.98 meters (6 feet 5.95 inches), McDermott decided that she would one day jump 2 meters (6 feet 6.74 inches).
In 2015 McDermott began studying at the University of Sydney. She received a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry in 2021.
Career
McDermott began her career competing nationally in the Australian Junior Championships. She participated in her first international athletics competition in 2014 at the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF; now World Athletics) Junior Championships in Eugene, Oregon. McDermott jumped 1.79 meters (5 feet 10.50 inches) but failed to make the finals. However, the heights she conquered in the high jump steadily increased, and in 2017 at a competition in Australia she jumped 1.9 meters (6 feet 2.8 inches). That score qualified her to participate in the IAAF World Championships in London. There she failed to jump the starting height of 1.8 meters (5 feet 10.9 inches) and was eliminated from the competition.
McDermott became well known for her identity as an evangelical Christian and has often spoken about how her faith inspires her when she participates in competitions. Every time she competes, the athlete writes a biblical verse on her wrist. In 2017 she and other Christian athletes founded the Everlasting Crowns, a ministry group that helps to run Bible studies and other faith-based events internationally.
At the 2018 Commonwealth Games, held at the Gold Coast of Queensland, Australia, McDermott jumped 1.91 meters (6 feet 3.2 inches) and won a bronze medal. However, she was dissatisfied with her performance at her next few international appearances, and she and her coaches decided to change her technique. Using the new technique, she was able to jump 1.96 meters (6 feet 5.17 inches) at a competition in Ostrava, Czech Republic, in 2019.
“With more success, there is more responsibility. If I get confident now, I will get comfortable and I won’t train the way that I need to…I don’t want to settle. I want to keep achieving new things.”—Nicola Olyslagers, following her success at the 2024 World Athletics Indoor Championships
McDermott was preparing for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics when they were postponed as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. She continued to train, though, pushing herself to excel. At a competition held in Germany in 2020, she achieved a personal best height of 1.98 meters (6 feet 5.95 inches). McDermott began 2021 by jumping a height of 1.96 meters in Canberra, Australia Capital Territory. At the Australian Track and Field Championships in Sydney a few months later, she hit the 2-meter mark, setting a national record with the jump and qualifying for her first Olympics. At the Games she made it to the finals, winning a silver medal. McDermott was the first Australian woman to win an Olympic medal in the high jump since Michele Brown received a silver medal in 1964.
In 2022 McDermott married Rhys Olyslagers, after which she began competing under the name Nicola Olyslagers. She set a new personal best of 2.03 meters (6 feet 7.92 inches) in January 2024 at the AIS Athletics Track meet in Canberra. A few months later, in March, she received her first world title, at the World Athletics Indoor Championships in Glasgow, Scotland. On her third high jump attempt at the competition, she reached a height of 1.99 meters (6 feet 6.35 inches), winning the global gold medal. At the 2024 Paris Games Olyslagers defended her silver medal, having cleared 2 meters.
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica