Skip to main content
Start of main content.

Belcher sails into Olympic history

Alumnus Mat Belcher makes Olympic history. PICTURE: Cavan Flynn

Mat Belcher (Class of 2001) has cemented his place as Australia’s greatest Olympic-class helm sailor by claiming gold at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.

Belcher, alongside teammate Mat Ryan, was dominant in the 470 class sailing event, wrapping up the gold medal with a race to spare.

The 2016 Rio Olympics silver medallists were ultra-consistent across five days of competition, winning four races, finishing second three times, and had a lowest finish of eighth.

It is Belcher’s second gold medal of his career after winning his first at the London 2012 Olympics.

He has also won nine world championships.

Belcher graduated a Bachelor of Commerce, Master of Project Management and a Master of Valuation and Property Management at Bond University.

Bond students and alumni have won four medals at the Tokyo Games so far.

Swimmers Alex Graham and Elijah Winnington won bronze in the 4x100m freestyle, while Graham won another bronze in the 4x100m freestyle.

More from Bond

  • Vaping – will new controls save our youths?

    According to national data from July 2023, one in six high school students had vaped in the past month. The rate is even higher (about one in four) in young adults. Professor Nick Zwar details why this is so concerning.

    Read article
  • Massive victories launch Bull Sharks into QFA finals

    AFL wrap: Riewoldt Family AFL Excellence Scholarship recipient Tom Ferguson stars as the Bull Sharks thump the Magpies.

    Read article
  • ‘Ugly’ food pretty nice for the budget

    Do you ever buy 'ugly' fruit? It's fresh and good to eat and could significantly help reduce the cost of your weekly shop and food wastage issues.

    Read article
  • Leary's Paralympic journey

    Paralympics 100m freestyle gold medal favourite Alexa Leary came home to Bond for her final training block before the Paris Games.

    Read article
  • Virtually unlocking young minds

    Virtual Reality is helping unlock the minds of neurodivergent children to enhance therapy sessions at Bond University's Health and Wellness Clinic.

    Read article
Previous Next