Jonathan Edwards
Senior teams know how to set ambitious targets. The harder problem is the long stretch between the target being set and the result arriving, when motivation drops, conditions shift, and the people responsible have to keep performing at the limit of their ability. Sustained execution under that pressure is what breaks most strategies, not the strategy itself.
Jonathan Edwards is an Olympic triple jump champion, world record holder and BBC athletics broadcaster who speaks to organisations about performing at the limit and presents major business events as a host and moderator.
Full Profile
Why organisations work with Jonathan Edwards
- A world record that has stood since 1995 gives him a rare authority on what it actually takes to perform at the top of a discipline, not a generic story about effort.
- He is a working broadcaster, not a retired athlete reading from cue cards. His BBC and Eurosport background carries directly into hosting awards nights, conferences and panel discussions with credibility on camera and on stage.
- His career arc covers Olympic gold, Olympic silver, a long stretch of injury and doubt, and a full second career in media. That gives him real material on the difference between winning once and staying competitive.
- He has worked at the centre of major institutional sport, from the LOCOG board for London 2012 to his current ambassador role with The R&A, which makes him comfortable in front of senior, formal audiences.
Biography highlights
- Olympic triple jump gold medallist, Sydney 2000, and Olympic silver medallist, Atlanta 1996.
- World Championship gold, Gothenburg 1995, where he broke the world record twice in a single competition.
- Triple jump world record holder at 18.29m, set on 7 August 1995, still unbeaten three decades later.
- BBC Sports Personality of the Year 1995. CBE in 2001, MBE in 1996.
- BBC athletics commentator and presenter, anchoring the BBC’s athletics coverage at the London 2012 Olympic Games before joining Eurosport.
- London 2012 Olympic Ambassador and athletes’ representative on the London Organising Committee for the Olympic and Paralympic Games.
- Global Development Ambassador for The R&A, with an active public role around The Open Championship.
Biography
The triple jump world record fell twice in twenty minutes at the 1995 World Championships in Gothenburg. Both jumps were Jonathan Edwards’s. The second, 18.29m, has not been beaten in more than thirty years and is one of the longest-standing records in track and field.
What sits underneath that mark is more useful for a business audience than the mark itself. Edwards spent years as a quietly talented British triple jumper who refused to compete on Sundays on religious grounds and seemed unlikely to convert that talent into titles. The breakthrough came late, sustained execution came later still, and Olympic gold in Sydney arrived in 2000, five years after the world record. The arc from talent to record to gold was not a straight line, and he is direct about that.
The second career matters as much as the first for the way organisations use him. As a BBC athletics commentator he anchored the corporation’s coverage of London 2012, and his broadcasting work has continued at Eurosport. That experience translates directly into the hosting, moderating and on-stage interviewing brief that most clients book him for. He is comfortable in front of a live, senior audience because he has done it for two decades on television.
He has also held formal roles at the centre of British and global sport. He sat on the LOCOG board as the athletes’ representative for London 2012, served as an Olympic Ambassador for the Games, and currently works as a Global Development Ambassador for The R&A around The Open Championship. The result is a speaker who carries the weight of an undefeated world record, the polish of a working broadcaster, and the institutional credibility of long service inside major sporting bodies.
Key speaking topics
- Peak performance under pressure
- Mental approach to competition
- Sustained excellence across a career
- Hosting and moderating major business events
- Awards presenting and after-dinner speaking
- Olympic and elite sport insight
- Resilience through setback and reinvention
Ideal for
- Corporate awards nights, gala dinners and conferences needing a recognisable host with broadcast experience.
- Leadership offsites and sales kick-offs that want a credible peak performance keynote rather than a generic motivational slot.
- Boards and senior teams looking to interview a world-class performer on stage, with a moderator who can carry the room.
Audience outcomes
- A clear sense of what world-class performance actually demands, told through one of athletics’ most-studied careers.
- Concrete language for talking about pressure, preparation and the gap between training and competition.
- A useful frame for thinking about long careers, where the second act often matters more than the first.
- A polished, professionally hosted event when he is engaged in a moderating or presenting capacity.