Mark Kerry

Mark Kerry

Mark Anthony Kerry is an Australian former backstroke and freestyle swimmer. He won three Olympic medals, including a gold in the 4 ×100 m medley relay at the 1980 Summer Olympics as the backstroker for the Quietly Confident Quartet. During his career, he won twelve Australian Championships. Kerry retired from swimming after the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. He later ran and owned Dunhill Management, one of the largest recruiting firms in the nation, with his brother.

About Mark Kerry in brief

Summary Mark KerryMark Anthony Kerry is an Australian former backstroke and freestyle swimmer. He won three Olympic medals, including a gold in the 4 × 100 m medley relay at the 1980 Summer Olympics as the backstroker for the Quietly Confident Quartet. During his career, he won twelve Australian Championships. Kerry retired from swimming after the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. He later ran and owned Dunhill Management, one of the largest recruiting firms in the nation, with his brother. Kerry was born in Temora, New South Wales, near the regional centre of Wagga Wagga. His mother was a swimming teacher who ran her own aquatic school. Kerry grew up participating in a wide range of sports, representing Wollongong High School in tennis, athletics and swimming. He also competed four times in the state cross-country championships. In 1974, Kerry competed in the Australian Age Championships in freestyle, before moving north to train with John Rigby in Brisbane, Queensland in the following year. Kerry won the 200 m freestyle and backstroke events to win selection for the 1976 Summer Olympics at the age of 16. He made his debut at the 1976 Australian Championships and promptly won the 100 m and 200 M freestyle events. In 1975, Kerry came second in the surf race at the Australian Open Surfing Championships. He then retired and took up a television and modelling career in the United States.

In 2001, the Kerry brothers sold Dunhill for A$22. 7 million, with up to A$13. 8 million in additional payments depending on the success of the company. Kerry is now the CEO of a recruitment firm, K2, based in Melbourne, Australia. He is also the co-founder of a sports management company, The Kerry Group, which has offices in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide, Brisbane and New Zealand. He has also been involved in a number of other sports, including golf, tennis, cricket and surfing. Kerry has a son, Mark, who is also a swimmer and surf lifesaving champion. The Kerry brothers have three children, all of whom are now in their 20s and 30s. Kerry’s first competitive race was in 1971, when he was 12 years old. In the pool, Kerry had his first competitive races at the aged of 12 in 1971. His peak of his career came at the 1974 Australian Championships, where he led off the winning team in the 4 ×100 million medley relay, the only time the U.S. did not win the event at the Olympics. As a teenager, Kerry enjoyed success in swimming and Surf lifesaving as a teenager. He was expelled from the 1978 Commonwealth Games team for breaking a curfew. Kerry had improved to such an extent by November 1975 that his 200m backstroke had dropped from around 2 m 10s to 0 s 3 times in that year, ranking him third in the world. He retired from the pool as a result of his performances.