Jason Kenny Net Worth 2022, Age, Wife, Children, Height, Family, Parents, Medals, Gold

Jason Kenny net worth

Read the complete write-up of Jason Kenny net worth, age, wife, children, height, family, parents, Olympics, medal, gold as well as other information you need to know.

Introduction

Jason Kenny is an English former track cyclist, specializing in individual and team sprints. Kenny’s seven Olympic gold medals place him joint 15th by reference to gold medals won in the Summer Olympic games since 1896. He is the single holder of the records for both most Olympic golds and Olympic medals for a cyclist. After winning World and European Junior titles in 2006 and achieving medals in the under-23 European championships in 2007, Kenny was selected to compete for Great Britain at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. With Chris Hoy and Jamie Staff, he won a gold medal in the team sprint, breaking the world record in the qualifying round. He finished behind Hoy in the final of the individual sprint, gaining a silver medal.

Kenny gained his first world championship title in January 2012, when Grégory Baugé’s results were nullified after a backdated 12-month ban for missing a drugs test, and the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) promoted Kenny to the gold medal. At the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, he won gold medals in both the team sprint and the individual sprint, beating Baugé in the final. At the 2016 Summer Olympics, Jason Kenny again won in the Team Sprint and the Individual Sprint, and also won the Keirin. In the 2020 Summer Olympics he won the Keirin again.

Early life

NameJason Kenny
Net Worth$4 million
OccupationTrack Cyclist
Height1.77m
Age33 years
Jason Kenny net worth 2022

Sir Jason Francis Kenny, CBE was born on March 23, 1988 (age 33 years) in Bolton, United Kingdom. His parents are Lorraine Kenny and Michael Kenny, and he has an older brother, Craig Kenny. He was educated at Mount St Joseph School in Farnworth. In the run-up to the London 2012 Olympic Games, Kenny visited the school and praised the support he had received from his PE teachers.

Kenny was a keen sportsperson during his youth, showing ability as a football goalkeeper as well as playing cricket and tennis, but having learned to ride a bicycle at a young age, became involved in track racing when he and his brother attended a track session at the National Cycling Centre in Manchester when an uncle had booked a session and had some spare places.

Career

Jason Kenny’s first track competition was when he competed in the Future Stars series, a junior competition held as part of the Revolution series at the Manchester Velodrome. Kenny competed in a number of ad hoc events during the first season of the Revolution in 2003/2004. In the second season, he competed in the first fully-fledged Future Series competition, taking part in a number of sprint and endurance events for 15- and 16-year-olds, during the season of four-track meetings. The series provided young people with the chance to compete in front of a crowd from an early age; it is known for providing opportunities for many young riders. When the 2004/2005 season finished in February 2005, Kenny was in the top 10 of the final standings.

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Kenny competed for Great Britain at a junior level as a sprinter and won world titles at the junior world championships during the 2005/2006 racing season. In the 2006/2007 season, he competed at a senior level for the team and took part in a number of World Cup Classics events across the world and Revolution events in Manchester, against some of the world’s best Sprint riders. In the Revolution events in the 2007/2008 season, Kenny beat the world champion, Theo Bos.

He made his debut in the world championships in 2008, finishing fifth overall in the sprint competition. In the Olympic Games, he made the team sprint squad, replacing Ross Edgar at man 2 in the team just before the Games. The team defeated the French team that had beaten them to the world title in Manchester only months earlier by over half a second. In the sprint competition, Kenny reached the final but was defeated by his teammate Chris Hoy 2–0. His rise as a cyclist has been rapid. He progressed from competing in a domestic junior series to Olympic Champion in only 3 and a half years.

In the season following the 2008 Games, Kenny scored three gold medals in the 2008–09 Track Cycling World Cup Classics, and took silver in the team sprint at the 2009 UCI Track Cycling World Championships alongside Jamie Staff and Matthew Crampton, losing out to France. In 2010 he took his first title at the European Track Championships, winning the gold in the keirin. At the 2012 World Championships, Kenny took silver in the sprint behind Grégory Baugé and a bronze in the keirin.

At the London 2012 Olympic Games, Jason Kenny won gold in the team sprint with Chris Hoy and Philip Hindes, setting a new world record in the London Velopark with a time of 42.6 seconds. He also won gold in the men’s sprint final, setting a new Olympic record in qualifying and avenging his previous losses to Baugé with a 200m time of 10.308s in his final lap. Kenny was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2013 New Year Honours for services to cycling.

Following the 2012 Olympics Jason Kenny competed at the 2013 World Championships, in the individual sprint and Team Sprint races he finished 7th and 6th respectively. He won the keirin event. His 2013–14 season started with national titles in all three Olympic sprints, team sprints and the keirin. At the first round of the UCI Track World Cup he failed to qualify for the sprint event, whilst finishing 4th in the Keirin and winning a bronze medal in the Team Sprint. At the second round of the World Cup, he secured silver medals in the Sprint and Team Sprint but did not contest the Keirin. The World Cup/Championships season finished with the UCI World Championships where he failed to secure any medals, finishing 5th in all three events he contested.

Jason Kenny won a silver medal in the Team Sprint at the Commonwealth Games. In the Sprint event, he qualified 11th out of 12 qualifiers and went on to lose his first-round against Eddie Dawkins of New Zealand. This left him in the repechage, where he beat his Great Britain teammates Callum Skinner and Lewis Oliva to make it to the 1/8 finals. Despite his poor form in the early rounds, in the 1/8 round, he beat Matthew Glaetzer, the fastest qualifier (qualifying almost half a second quicker) and holder of the Commonwealth record, in two straight rides, to secure his way into the semi-finals, where he beat Peter Lewis after three rides. In the final he won a silver medal, losing 2–1 to Sam Webster.

Kenny took gold in the team sprint in the round in Guadalajara in the 2014–15 UCI Track Cycling World Cup. The year 2015 brought national titles in the 1 km time trial and the team sprint. In the run-up to the Rio Olympics, he was part of the squad that won gold in the Hong Kong round of the 2015–16 Track World Cup alongside Hindes and Skinner and went on to win the gold in the sprint at the 2016 Track World Championships in London, defeating Matthew Glaetzer 2–1 in the final.

At the Rio 2016 Olympic Games Kenny won gold in the men’s team sprint with Philip Hindes and Callum Skinner. The trio broke the world record twice in the Olympic competition, first in qualifying and again in the final against New Zealand, after the latter had set a new world record themselves in the first round. He won gold in the men’s individual sprint, beating Callum Skinner in the final after losing just one ride, to eventual bronze medallist Denis Dmitriev in the semi-finals. On 16 August Kenny won the gold medal in the final of the men’s Keirin after the race was re-started twice due to derny infringements, to join Chris Hoy as the holder of 6 Olympic gold medals, more than any other GB athlete.

Following the Rio Games, Kenny made an unannounced retirement from competition, later stating that this was due to the physical and mental toll of cycle racing. However, after a year away from the track and the birth of his first child, he decided to return to racing, stating in an interview in September 2017 that the break had “refreshed” him. Kenny made his comeback at a round of the Revolution series at Manchester Velodrome in January 2018, setting the fastest time in sprint qualifying ahead of a field that included rival Grégory Baugé and placing second in the sprint and keirin competitions.

He returned to international championship competition at the 2018 UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Apeldoorn, where he was part of the silver medal-winning squad in the team sprint alongside Hindes, Jack Carlin, Ryan Owens and Joseph Truman, earning Team GB’s first team sprint medal at the World Championships since 2011. Kenny, Carlin and Owens went on to earn two further team sprint silvers at the 2019 UEC European Track Championships, also held in Apeldoorn, and the 2020 World Championships in Berlin.

Summer Olympics

At the delayed 2020 Tokyo Olympics in the summer of 2021, Jason Kenny, Carlin, and Owens took another team sprint silver, losing out to the Dutch team in the final. Although this was Kenny’s first loss in an Olympic final, the medal made him Britain’s most successful Olympian. In the sprint, he placed eighth in qualifying, and his bid to defend his title received a setback when he lost in the 1/8 finals to Denis Dmitriev: although he was able to secure a slot in the quarter-finals by winning the repechage, he was knocked out in the last eight by Harrie Lavreysen, losing 2–0 to the Dutchman before finishing last in the small final, securing eighth place overall.

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In the keirin, Kenny took the gold medal after going on the attack when the derny pulled off the track with three laps to go, building on a gap that had already appeared between himself and the rest of the field led by Matthew Glaetzer and holding on to the lead to cross the finish line with a gap of over three-quarters of a second over the second-placed Azizulhasni Awang. The win gave him his seventh gold medal and ninth medal overall, making him the British Olympian with the most golds and most medals.

Wife

Jason Kenny is married to Laura Trott, they had their wedding in September 2016. His wife Laura Trott is a track cyclist. As of 2016, the couple lives near Knutsford in Cheshire. On 14 February 2017, it was announced that the couple was expecting their first child; their son Albie Kenny was born on 23 August 2017. Kenny is a motorsport enthusiast and has participated in car racing in his spare time, including racing a Ginetta G40 and scored a podium finish in a round of the Radical European Masters at the Nürburgring in 2014. Taken together, Jason and Laura Kenny have won 12 Olympic gold medals, which places them among the most successful Olympic medalist families of all time.

Kenny is the holder of most Olympic gold medals (7) and medals (9) for a British athlete. His wife, Laura Kenny, holds the same records on the female side, and together they are the most successful married couple in Summer Olympic history where both spouses have won at least one gold medal (with 12 gold and 3 silver medals between them).

Kenny was knighted in the 2022 New Year Honours for services to cycling. His wife Laura was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in the same list, also for services to cycling. In February of that year, Kenny announced that he was retiring from the competition in order to take the role of men’s podium sprint coach with British Cycling.

Jason Kenny net worth

How much is Jason Kenny worth? Jason Kenny net worth is estimated at around $4 million. His main source of income is from his career as a track cyclist. Kenny successful career has earned him some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy cars trips. He is one of the richest and influential track cyclists in the United Kingdom. However, Kenny was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2009 New Year Honours. Kenny was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2017 New Year Honours for services to cycling.