Three-time Canadian 800m champion and Tokyo Olympian Madeleine (Maddy) Kelly capped off an incredible 15-year career on Tuesday; the 29-year-old took to Instagram to officially announce her retirement.
Kelly had run professionally for ASICS since 2022 and has written for Canadian Running since 2018. She built an extensive resumé, earning spots on five national teams at World, Commonwealth and Olympic championships, partnering with various brands and joining the RBC Olympians program. Looking back at her experiences as a runner, Kelly says she wouldn’t change a thing.
“I’m so proud of my career and how it turned out,” she told Canadian Running. “I wouldn’t change anything.”
The Pembroke, Ont., native was first coached by Terry Radchenko in 2013, during her first year competing for the University of Toronto (U of T). Radchenko became one of the most influential figures in Kelly’s life, coaching her throughout her post-collegiate career. When asked which people taught her the most, Kelly responded, “Terry is number one.”
One of Kelly’s top-two favourite running memories comes from her time at U of T, when the Blues squad raced to a CIS (now U Sports) cross-country title in Victoria in 2017, Kelly’s final year. “We were really a team of 800m runners going up against some of the best distance squads in Canada,” she says. “And it was the first year running 8K.” (Women previously raced 5K.)
“The weather was horrible,” Kelly continues. “I don’t remember, but my teammate told me I woke up and said, we’re going to win today, and then we did. It was such a cool and special experience.”
Another favourite memory for Kelly is winning her first national title, at the 2019 Canadian Bell Track and Field Championships in Montreal. She clocked 2:02.37, edging out Canadian 800m record holder Melissa Bishop-Nriagu by three hundredths of a second. “That was a big day that really changed how I saw myself in the sport,” Kelly says. She went on to add two more Canadian titles to her collection, in 2022 and 2023, and dipped under the elusive two-minute barrier twice. Her personal best of 1:59.71, which she ran in 2022, stands as the eighth-fastest among Canadian 800m runners.
“Competition and I are in a weird place right now,” Kelly says. “But I still run almost every day. I love running–my relationship with running is in the best place it’s been for a while.” The athlete, now living in Hamilton with her husband, former 1,500m runner Jeremy Rae, keeps herself busy in this new chapter of her life with a new job in marketing, Pilates and their new dachshund puppy, Pickle.
She is also quick to acknowledge her former sponsor, ASICS. “I’m so grateful to the running community and everything running has given me,” Kelly says. “ASICS was amazing. It’s the end of this first chapter–but I’m excited to be a track and field fan now. There are always new people, so I’m excited to continue to follow the event.”
The end of 2024 marked the close of a handful of elite Canadian athletes’ careers. 5,000m Tokyo Olympian and two-time national champion Julie-Anne Staehli, who ran professionally for Team New Balance Boston, also announced her retirement from competition on the final day of 2024. On Instagram, the 31-year-old wrote “I still have so many goals in this sport, but I’m ready to start the next adventure.”