Ashley Moloney

Ashley Moloney (born 13 March 2000) is an Australian decathlete.[1] He won bronze at the 2020 Olympic Games, the first Australian decathlete to win an Olympic medal.

Ashley Moloney
Personal information
Born (2000-03-13) 13 March 2000
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Sport
CountryAustralia Australia
SportAthletics
Event(s)Decathlon
Coached bySteve Rippon
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s)Decathlon: 8649 (AR)
Medal record
Men's track and field
Representing  Australia
Olympic Games
Bronze medal – third place2020 TokyoDecathlon
World Indoor Championships
Bronze medal – third place2022 BelgradeHeptathlon
World Junior Championships
Gold medal – first place2018 TampereDecathlon

Early years

Moloney attended school in Browns Plains, a suburb in Logan Qld. Moloney was the fastest at primary school and enjoyed the crowd that gathered when he broke school high jump records. He competed in jumps, triple/high/pole and sprints for his school, region and state.[2] In 2015, aged 15, he won the Australian All Schools U16 high jump title with a leap of 2.00 metres. Moloney then he competed in his first combined event on just two weeks of training.

Moloney's coach, Eric Brown, believed that Moloney could make the Olympics as a decathlete with a lot of hard work. In early 2016, in his second competition, he won the national U18 title, just days after he turned 16. In September 2016, he tallied 7328 with a sub-11 100m, 14+ metres in the shot, sub-14 hurdles, 4.60m vault and 4:50 1500m.[2]

Achievements

In 2017 Moloney broke the U18 Australian Decathlon Points Record [3] previously held by Jake Stein.

He won the gold medal at the 2018 World Junior Championships in Tampere.[4] In achieving this result, Moloney broke the Competition Record, previously held by Niklas Kaul, and the Oceania Junior Record previously held by Cedric Dubler.[5] At the mid-2019 Oceania Championships, while still a teenager, Moloney scored 8103 points with the senior implements, raising the prospect of qualifying for the 2020 Olympics. Although injury in early 2020 threatened Ash's Olympic dream, the COVID-19 pandemic caused the Tokyo Olympics to be postponed and Ash and his training partner Cedric Dubler were able to qualify for them at the end of 2020. In doing so Moloney broke the Australian senior and Oceanian records for the Decathlon, increasing Jagan Hames's previous records by 2 points to 8492 points.[6]

In winning bronze at the 2020 Olympic Games, the first Australian decathlete to medal at an Olympics, he further improved the Oceanian and Australian record to 8649 points.[7] Needing to complete the final 1500m event within several seconds of his closest points competitors, or better, the efforts of Ashley's fellow Australian decathlete Cedric Dubler to motivate him in the final stages of this race were lauded by the Australian and even world media as one of the most memorable moments of the Tokyo Olympics.[8][9]

Ash competed in the 2022 World Indoor Athletics Championships in the Men's Heptathlon where he finished the first day's competition in third place with 3,551 points. He finished in 3rd place with 6344 points, an Oceania Area Record and the highest third place tally ever for an indoor heptathlon.

Personal bests

Outdoor

As of 29 May 2023[1]
Event Performance Location Date Points
Decathlon8649 points AR NRTokyo4-5 August 20218649 points
100 metres10.34 sec (0.0 m/s)Tokyo4 August 20211013 points
Long jump7.72 m (0.8 m/s)Sydney15 April 2021990 points
Shot put15.20 mGötzis27 May 2023802 points
High Jump2.11 mBrisbane19 December 2020906 points
Tokyo4 August 2021
400 metres45.82 secBrisbane19 December 20201017 points
110 metres hurdles14.08 sec (−1.0 m/s)Tokyo5 August 2021964 points
Discus throw45.11 mBrisbane4 June 2021769 points
Pole vault5.05 mCairns18 July 2021926 points
Javelin throw57.77 mBrisbane20 December 2020704 points
1500 metres4:39.19 secTokyo5 August 2021685 points
Virtual Best Performance8776 points


Indoor

Event Performance Location Date Points
Heptathlon6344 points AR NRBelgrade, Serbia18-19 March 20226344 points
60 metres6.70 secBelgrade18 March 20221097 points
Long jump7.82 mBelgrade18 March 20221032 points
Shot put13.89 mBelgrade18 March 2022758 points
High Jump2.02 mBelgrade18 March 2022932 points
60 metres hurdles7.88 secBelgrade19 March 20221012 points
Pole vault5.10 mBelgrade19 March 2022941 points
1000 metres2.43.01 secBelgrade19 March 2022840 points
Virtual Best Performance6344 points

International competition record

YearCompetitionVenuePositionEventResult
Representing  Australia
2018 World Junior Championships Tampere, Finland 1st Decathlon (Junior) 8190 CR, AJR
7th 4 x 400m relay 3:09:31
2019 Hypo-Meeting Götzis, Austria 13th Decathlon 8038
Oceania Championships Townsville, Australia 1st Decathlon 8103
2021 Olympic Games Tokyo, Japan 3rd Decathlon 8649
2022 World Indoor Championships Belgrade, Serbia 3rd Heptathlon 6344
World Championships Eugene, United States Decathlon DNF
2023 Hypo-Meeting Götzis, Austria Decathlon DNF
World Championships Budapest, Hungary Decathlon DNF

Personal life

Moloney joined the Jimboomba Little Athletics Club when he was 12 years old.[10] He hails from Logan in Southeast Queensland. He attended Regents Park State School and Browns Plains State High School.[11][12]

References

  1. Ashley Moloney | Profile | worldathletics.org Accessed 5 August 2021
  2. "Ash Moloney". Australian Olympic Committee. Retrieved 8 October 2021.
  3. Athletics Australia - Records Accessed 15 July 2018
  4. Tampere 2018 Results Accessed 13 July 2018
  5. Moloney and Haasbroek Gold and Silver in Tampere Accessed 15 July 2018
  6. Moloney breaks Oceania decathlon record with 8492 in Brisbane Accessed 19 March 2022
  7. "Ashley Moloney secures Australia's first Olympic decathlon medal with bronze in Tokyo". www.abc.net.au. 5 August 2021. Archived from the original on 5 August 2021. Retrieved 7 August 2021.
  8. "Tokyo Olympics: Seven moments that moved us". www.abc.net.au. 8 August 2021. Retrieved 9 August 2021.
  9. "Tokyo delivered, and reminded us what really matters". Fox Sports. 8 August 2021. Retrieved 9 August 2021.
  10. McLennan, Matt (5 August 2021). "'He was always a good jumper' - tributes to Ash Moloney begin". Redland City Bulletin. Retrieved 1 September 2021.
  11. Kennedy, Paul (6 August 2021). "Ash Moloney's decathlon bronze medal at Tokyo Olympics just the beginning for 21-year-old star, coach says". ABC News. Retrieved 9 August 2021.
  12. "How an Origin great helped our bronzed Olympian Ash". Courier Mail. 6 August 2021. Retrieved 9 August 2021.
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