Kirsty Coventry

Kirsty Coventry
10th President of the International Olympic Committee
Assumed office
23 June 2025
Preceded byThomas Bach
Minister of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation of Zimbabwe
In office
10 September 2018 – 25 March 2025
PresidentEmmerson Mnangagwa
Deputy
Preceded byKazembe Kazembe
Succeeded byAnselem Nhamo Sanyatwe
Personal details
BornKirsty Leigh Coventry
(1983-09-16) 16 September 1983
Harare, Zimbabwe
PartyIndependent
Spouse
Tyrone Seward
(m. 2013)
Children2
Alma materAuburn University (BS)
Sports career
National team Zimbabwe
Height1.76 m (5 ft 9 in)
Weight64 kg (141 lb; 10.1 st)
WebsiteKirstyCoventry.com
SportSwimming
StrokesBackstroke, individual medley
ClubLonghorn Aquatics
College teamAuburn University
CoachSharon Freeman, Dean Price, Kim Brackin, David Marsh
Medal record
Women's swimming
Representing  Zimbabwe
Olympic Games
2004 Athens 200 m backstroke
2008 Beijing 200 m backstroke
2004 Athens 100 m backstroke
2008 Beijing 100 m backstroke
2008 Beijing 200 m medley
2008 Beijing 400 m medley
2004 Athens 200 m medley
World Championships (LC)
2005 Montreal 100 m backstroke
2005 Montreal 200 m backstroke
2009 Rome 200 m backstroke
2005 Montreal 200 m medley
2005 Montreal 400 m medley
2007 Melbourne 200 m backstroke
2007 Melbourne 200 m medley
2009 Rome 400 m medley
World Championships (SC)
2008 Manchester 400 m medley
2008 Manchester 100 m backstroke
2008 Manchester 200 m backstroke
2008 Manchester 200 m medley
2008 Manchester 100 m medley
Commonwealth Games
2002 Manchester 200 m medley
African Games
2007 Algiers 50 m freestyle
2007 Algiers 800 m freestyle
2007 Algiers 50 m backstroke
2007 Algiers 100 m backstroke
2007 Algiers 200 m backstroke
2007 Algiers 200 m medley
2007 Algiers 400 m medley
2011 Maputo 100 m backstroke
2011 Maputo 200 m backstroke
2011 Maputo 200 m medley
2011 Maputo 400 m medley
2015 Brazzaville 100 m backstroke
2015 Brazzaville 200 m backstroke
2015 Brazzaville 200 m medley
2007 Algiers 100 m breaststroke
2007 Algiers 4 × 100 m medley
2007 Algiers 4 × 200 m freestyle
2011 Maputo 100 m butterfly
2011 Maputo 4 × 100 m medley
2011 Maputo 4 × 100 m freestyle
2011 Maputo 4 × 200 m freestyle
2015 Brazzaville 4 × 100 m mixed medley
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Kirsty Leigh Coventry Seward (née Coventry; born 16 September 1983) is a Zimbabwean politician, sports administrator, and former competitive swimmer who is the president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC). She has served as the president of the IOC since 23 June 2025, and is the first woman, the first Zimbabwean, and the first African to hold the office, while also only the second non-European president of the IOC, following Avery Brundage who left office in 1972. Coventry served in the Cabinet of Zimbabwe from September 2018 to March 2025 as the Minister of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation until September 2023 and then as Minister of Sport, Recreation, Arts and Culture. A former Olympic swimmer and world record holder, she is the most decorated African Olympian.

Born in Harare, Coventry attended and swam competitively for Auburn University in Alabama, in the United States. At the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Coventry won three Olympic medals: a gold, a silver, and a bronze, and in the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing she won four medals: a gold and three silver. She was subsequently described by Paul Chingoka, head of the Zimbabwe Olympic Committee, as "our national treasure". Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe called her "a golden girl", and awarded her US$100,000 in cash for her 2008 Olympic performance. In 2016, Coventry retired from swimming after her fifth Olympics, having won the joint-most individual medals in women's swimming in Olympic history. She is a member of the IOC and was elected the Chairperson of the IOC Athletes' Commission, the body that represents all Olympic athletes worldwide, in early 2018. In 2025, she was elected president of the IOC, becoming the first woman and first African to do so. Following her election, President Emmerson Mnangagwa appointed General Anselem Nhamo Sanyatwe to replace her as Minister of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation.