EDITOR’S NOTE: Following reader submissions, this article has been updated with several more entries. Send any Olympics tips to sports@jta.org.
There are veterans like an Australian gold medalist canoe paddler and Israel’s powerhouse judo team.
There are newcomers, like the youngest American female wrestler ever and Israel’s soccer team.
And there are athletes competing in events from fencing to beach volleyball to racewalking to air pistol shooting.
The 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris are around the corner, running from July 26 through Aug. 11, and dozens of Jewish athletes will be among the estimated 10,500 competitors representing roughly 200 countries in 329 events across 32 sports. The United States’ delegation features nearly 600 athletes, while Israel will have nearly 90 competitors, one of its biggest delegations ever.
Read on for a (nearly exhaustive) list of Jewish and Israeli athletes to watch as Paris 2024 approaches.
Is there a Jewish or Israeli Olympian we should keep an eye on? Shoot us a message at sports@jta.org!
Gymnast Artem Dolgopyat, Israel’s only active Olympic gold medalist
When it comes to floor exercise, the artistic gymnastics competition, few are as accomplished as Ukrainian-born Israeli Olympian Artem Dolgopyat. The 27-year-old has won gold medals in that event in recent years at the Olympics, the World Championships, the European Championships and the Maccabiah Games.
Dolgopyat was born in what is now Dnipro, Ukraine, and by the time his family moved to Israel when he was 12, he was already a two-time Ukrainian national champion for his age group. He trained at the acclaimed Maccabi Tel Aviv sports club in his adopted home and went on to become the Israeli national champion in the floor exercise.
At the Tokyo Olympics, Dolgopyat earned Israel’s second-ever gold medal, and first in gymnastics. (Fellow Israeli Linoy Ashram won gold in rhythmic gymnastics days later.)
Amit Elor, youngest female wrestler in U.S. Olympic history
Amit Elor, whose parents are Israeli, is making her Olympics debut with the U.S. wrestling team. She is the youngest female wrestler in history to represent the U.S. at the Games.
At only 20, Elor is already a two-time world champion. She has also won gold medals at the 2023 Pan American Championships, the 2022 and 2023 U23 World Championships and at three consecutive Junior World Championships from 2021 through 2023.
Elor’s 2022 World Championship win, which came when she was 18, made her the youngest senior world champion in U.S. history. She currently ranks No. 1 in the U.S. in the 68-kilogram weight class, the group in which she will compete in Paris.
Canoe paddler Jessica Fox — and her younger sister, Noemi
Aussie Jessica Fox, who is regarded as the greatest individual paddler of all time, is back for her fourth Olympics, where she’ll look to build on her collection of medals — one gold, one silver and two bronze.
Fox, 30, won her Olympic gold in the canoe slalom in the Tokyo Games, becoming the first-ever woman to win gold in the event. Fox had been among the athletes pushing for the canoe slalom event to be opened to women, which happened in Tokyo.
Fox’s Jewish mother and coach, Myriam Jerusalmi, won bronze in the K-1 (single kayak) slalom competition for France at the 1996 Olympics. Her father, Richard Fox, paddled for Britain at the 1992 Olympics. Her younger sister Noemi, 27, is making her Olympics debut in the women’s kayak cross event, which is being held for the first time in Paris.
Jesse Grupper, American rock climbing champion
New Jersey native Jesse Grupper began rock climbing at age 6. Now 27, the top-ranked U.S. men’s lead climber is Paris-bound. Grupper, who graduated from Tufts University in 2019 with a degree in mechanical engineering, won the 2023 Pan American Championships in the combined boulder and lead climbing competitions and earned two first-place finishes at the 2022 International Federation of Sport Climbing World Cup, to go along with a second-place and third-place finish.
Grupper’s grandparents, Ruth and Edward Grupper, helped found the New City Jewish Center, a Conservative synagogue in Rockland County, New York. Grupper’s family belongs to the Reconstructionist Bnai Keshet synagogue in Montclair, New Jersey, where Grupper celebrated his bar mitzvah. Grupper, who was diagnosed with ulcerative colitis as a teenager, also volunteers to teach rock climbing to children with disabilities.
Nick Itkin and his fellow Jewish fencing stars
Fencing has quietly become a sport dominated by Jewish athletes in recent years, a trend led by Los Angeles native Nick Itkin, currently ranked as the No. 2 men’s foil fencer in the world. He was previously No. 1.
Itkin, 24, won a bronze medal at the Tokyo Olympics to go along with a number of other recent medals and championships at major international fencing tournaments, as well as two NCAA titles. After winning a silver medal at the 2023 World Fencing Championships, Itkin became the first U.S. man, and third U.S. fencer overall, to win individual medals at back-to-back world championships.
Itkin is joined on the U.S. fencing team by Eli Dershwitz, the No. 3-ranked saber fencer in the world and a two-time Olympian who won gold at the 2023 World Championships in saber — becoming the first American man to do so. Dershwitz, 28, is the grandson of Holocaust survivors and a two-time Maccabiah Games gold medalist.
On the women’s side, Maia Weintraub, the No. 13-ranked woman foil fencer in the world, is a two-time U.S. national champion with several gold medals at fencing World Cups, the 2019 European Maccabi Games and in the NCAA. Weintraub, 21, was an alternate at the Tokyo Olympics.
And for Israel, Yuval Freilich, 29, who won a gold medal at the 2024 Epee Grand Prix event in Qatar, is the country’s first fencer to qualify for the Olympics since 2008.
Alexandra Kiroi-Bogatyreva, four-time Australian champion in rhythmic gymnastics
At 22 years old, Alexandra Kiroi-Bogatyreva is already a decorated rhythmic gymnast with a number of national and international accolades. Kiroi-Bogatyreva, who was born in New Zealand but grew up in Melbourne, won two bronze medals at the 2018 Commonwealth Games and a bronze, silver and gold at the 2022 Games in different events. She has competed at five Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships and is a repeat Australian all-around champion, winning in four of the past five years.
Kiroi-Bogatyreva, who won five bronze medals at the 2022 Maccabiah Games in Israel, has also been recognized by her local Jewish community, earning numerous honors from the local affiliates Maccabi Victoria and Maccabi Australia, including several “Rising Star” awards. She was inducted into the Maccabi Victoria Hall of Fame in 2022.
Shooter Ada Korkhin, making her Olympics debut
Brookline, Mass., native Ada Korkhin was first introduced to air pistol shooting by her Israeli father Yakov when she was 9 years old. A decade later, the 19-year-old is headed to Paris to represent the U.S. in the 25-meter pistol event.
Korkhin, a rising sophomore at Ohio State University, won a team gold medal in that event at the 2024 Championship of the Americas Games in Buenos Aires, and silver medals at the 2002 USA Shooting Pistol National Championships as well as the 2022 USA Shooting National Junior Olympic Championships.
After missing the cut at the Olympic trials for Tokyo, she finished second in USA Shooting’s Olympic three-part trials this spring. Korkhin celebrated her bat mitzvah at Temple Sinai in the Boston suburb in 2016.
Sarah Levy, U.S. rugby player reaching the pinnacle of her sport
San Diego native Sarah Levy had never played rugby until her first year of college at Northeastern University. Now she’s representing America on the women’s Olympic rugby team. Levy, who was an active member of San Diego’s Jewish community throughout her childhood, briefly played for the New York Rugby Club in the Women’s Premier League after college, before getting recruited to join the U.S. team in 2018. She eventually joined the U.S. sevens program full-time, where she traveled the world competing in rugby tournaments while also studying to receive her doctorate in physical therapy.
Levy, who has been on every U.S. tournament roster since January, officially sealed her Olympic spot on June 7. She told JTA that it was only after she began telling her friends and family that she was Olympics-bound that the weight of the achievement began to set in.
“To see how excited they were for me, it allowed me to take that step back and really enjoy it and really see the pride that they had for me,” Levy said. “And realize, ‘Oh, this was a huge accomplishment. I don’t need to keep looking at it as checkpoints in my career.’”
Adam Mara’ana, an Israeli swimmer of Jewish and Arab descent
Adam Mara’ana is the first Arab Israeli to represent Israel in the Olympics since 1976, where he will compete in the 100-meter backstroke, an event in which he matched the Israeli record earlier this year. Mara’ana, 21, a Haifa native, is the son of a Jewish mother and an Arab Muslim father.
“My mother is Jewish, I served in the army, studied Torah, celebrated bar mitzvah, and my father is an Arab Muslim,” Mara’ana told the New York Post. “I’m very proud of it and he’s very proud of me.”
Two more Israeli swimmers to watch: Gal Cohen Groumi, who competed in the Tokyo Olympics and helped set an Israeli record in the 4 x 100-meter medley relay, and Matan Roditi. Groumi, 22, whose uncle was also an Israeli Olympic swimmer, has won gold medals at the 2024 European Championships, the 2022 Maccabiah Games and the 2018 European Junior Championships. Roditi, a marathon swimmer, placed fourth in the 2020 Olympics, the closest Israel has come to medaling in Olympic swimming. Roditi, 25, has set Israeli national records in numerous swimming events.
Jemima Montag, Australian racewalking record-holder
Australian racewalker Jemima Montag returns to the Olympics for the second time, where she will look to improve on her sixth-place finish in the women’s 20-kilometer racewalk event.
Montag, 26, is a two-time gold medalist at the Commonwealth Games and a silver medalist at the 2023 World Athletics Championships. She also holds Australia’s record in the 20-kilometer racewalk. Montag was named Australia’s Outstanding Jewish Junior Sportswoman of the Year in 2013 at age 15.
She is also a full-time medical student at Melbourne University.
Sagi Muki and Israel’s formidable national Judo team
Six of Israel’s 13 Olympic medals have come in judo, including the first-ever medals Israel won, at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. As Israel has grown into a judo powerhouse, Sagi Muki has become one of its brightest stars.
Muki, 32, is a world champion and two-time European champion, and he was part of the Israeli team that won a bronze medal at the Tokyo Olympics. He has also won several judo grands prix and grand slams.
Two-time Olympic bronze medalist Or “Ori” Sasson retired in 2022, but several of Muki’s other teammates from the judo mixed team at the last Olympics will return in 2024: Tohar Butbul, Raz Hershko, Inbar Lanir, Timna Nelson-Levy, Peter Paltchik, Shira Rishony, Gili Sharir and Baruch Shmailov, plus newcomers Yam Wolczak, Gefen Primo and Maya Goshen. Paltchik, a former European champion, will serve as one of Israel’s flag bearers at the Opening Ceremony.
Romi Paritzki and Israel’s rhythmic gymnastics team
Expectations are high for Israel’s gymnasts, who in the past have earned two of Israel’s three Olympic gold medals. Romi Paritzki, 20, is the captain of Israel’s rhythmic gymnastics team, which is coming off its first-ever gold medals at the 2023 Rhythmic Gymnastics World Championships. The team also won gold at the 2022 Rhythmic Gymnastics European Championships, hosted in Tel Aviv.
Paritzki is joined on the team by Ofir Shaham, 19, Diana Svertsov, 19, Adar Friedmann, 17, and Shani Bakanov, 18.
Another Israeli female gymnast to keep an eye on: Lihie Raz, 20, the 2019 Israeli national champion who won a bronze medal at the 2020 European Championships and competed in the Tokyo Olympics in artistic gymnastics.
Sean Goldberg and the Israeli national soccer team
Israel is competing in Olympic soccer (officially called football) for the first time since 1976. The Israeli men’s national team clinched its spot in Paris at the UEFA European U-21 Championship, where it lost to England in the semifinals.
Israel has had some promising results on the pitch recently. Its under-20 team captured third place in the FIFA U-20 World Cup in Argentina last year, beating South Korea, Uzbekistan, Japan and powerhouse Brazil on its Cinderella run.
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