Doctor by day, javelin thrower by night. Sydney’s Mackenzie Little has again reminded the world that athletics is not her sole identity, but simply one part of a remarkable balancing act. The 28-year-old claimed bronze in the women’s javelin at the 2025 World Athletics Championships in Tokyo: Australia’s third medal of the meet, and her second global bronze.
Little, ranked world number five, produced her best throw on her opening attempt: 63.58m. It was a mark that held her in medal contention throughout, bettered only by Ecuador’s Juleisy Angulo with a national record 65.12m, and Latvia’s Anete Sietiņa with a personal best of 64.64m.
“I really just tried to give my all throughout the competition, and I couldn’t be happier for Anete who I’ve known since 2013 when we competed at the World Youth Championships,” Little said. “I’m just thrilled.”

A Big-Stage Performer
Despite contesting only ten meets this year, surpassing 60m in just two of them, Little again rose to the occasion when it mattered most. She briefly led the competition in round one, sat in silver medal position through to the final round, and ultimately walked away with bronze as Sietiņa moved past her late.
It extends Australia’s proud tradition in the event, the women’s javelin now the nation’s most successful discipline at the World Championships with two gold, two silver and two bronze medals, with both of the latter belonging to Little.

Medicine Before Medals
What makes Little’s achievements all the more remarkable is that her day job takes place far from the track. As a doctor at Sydney’s Royal North Shore Hospital, she spends her days immersed in medicine, often arriving at the track with just an hour left in her evening to train.
“Sometimes I only have an hour or so for my session in the evening so that’s all I’m going to get,” she explained.
“It’s easy to say I have this wonderful balance and everything comes perfectly together when I’ve got a medal around my neck, but things have been hard. For me, I compete best when I’m really happy and fulfilled in other parts of my life. My work is so fulfilling at the moment.”

The Quote That Says It All
If Little’s results say she is a world-class thrower, her words show why her approach is unique:
“Athletics and being a doctor: it doesn’t always work and it’s really hard sometimes. This season was so, so hard.
“Every year with medicine as I have increasing responsibilities, it’s more of a big thing in my life. It’s about trying to get that training in and trying to be consistent, because that will make me a nice, happy doctor if I’ve had my exercise and sleep.
“I certainly don’t spend too much time worrying about athletics and recovery and stressing — I’m able to have that as my complete release, my selfish time.
“This season was such a tough balance at the beginning of the year, but somehow I was able to drag myself to the sessions, lean on my parents and home-cooked meals, and chat to Angus about what we both needed to make this work. It worked this time, and I’m so sure that this is the way that’s best for me, so when it does pay off it’s really rewarding.”
That balance — not medals alone — is what defines Mackenzie Little. A doctor first, a javelin thrower always, and proof that fulfilment across all parts of life can produce world-class performances.