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Great Britain's Jim Fox on the podium at the Montreal Olympics in 1976
Great Britain's Jim Fox on the podium at the Montreal Olympics in 1976. Photograph: Colorsport/Shutterstock
Great Britain's Jim Fox on the podium at the Montreal Olympics in 1976. Photograph: Colorsport/Shutterstock

Former Olympic pentathlon champion Jim Fox dies aged 81

This article is more than 11 months old
  • British pentathlete won gold at Montreal Games in 1976
  • Fox also exposed the cheating of Boris Onishchenko

The 1976 Olympic modern pentathlon champion Jim Fox has died at the age of 81. Fox was one of the most important figures in British modern pentathlon, having teamed up with Danny Nightingale and Adrian Parker to win gold at the 1976 Games in Montreal.

Fox was also famous for exposing the cheating of the Soviet athlete Boris Onishchenko, who was disqualified from the same team event after it was discovered a switch had been hidden in his fencing sword to falsely register hits.

An army sergeant in the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, Fox was the only modern pentathlete to represent Britain in four Olympic Games, while his fourth-placed individual finish in 1972 was the best by a British man until Joe Choong claimed gold at Tokyo in 2021.

Fox also served as chairman of Pentathlon GB, and a statement from the governing body said: “All at Pentathlon GB send their condolences to Jim Fox’s family and remain grateful for everything he has done for our sport.”

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