Birth name | Jodie Ounsley | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Date of birth | 17 January 2001 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Place of birth | Dewsbury, West Yorkshire, England | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 1.74 m (5 ft 9 in) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Weight | 74 kg (163 lb) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rugby union career | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Jodie Ounsley (born 17 January 2001)[1] is an English former rugby union player who played for Premier 15s side Exeter Chiefs Women as a winger. In 2019 she became the first deaf female rugby player to play for a senior England side and the world's first-ever deaf female rugby sevens international. She is also a former British Brazilian jiu jitsu champion.[1] She also appeared as "Fury" in the 2024 BBC One reboot of Gladiators and has worked as an interviewer for Channel 4's coverage of the 2024 Paralympic Games in Paris.[2]
From Dewsbury, West Yorkshire, Ounsley was born prematurely and needed medication which subsequently impacted her hearing and became profoundly deaf.[3] She had a cochlear implant as a toddler, becoming the youngest person in the country to have the procedure.[4] A high achiever in sports she was the junior world coal carrying champion on five occasions and won five sprint titles at the Deaf Athletics Championship, and won a gold medal at the British Open Brazilian jiu-jitsu finals.[5] She attended Shelley College where her sporting endeavours were initially frustrated by a knee injury known as Osgood Schlatter Disease. She began playing rugby in October 2015 and by May 2016 was top try scorer for her age group Sandal Girls RUFC team and was representing Yorkshire under-15s.[6] She attended Loughborough College to study a degree in sports coaching.[7]
Ounsley plays rugby with a scrum cap which protects her cochlear implant.[8] In 2018 Ounsley won the young Deaf Sports Personality award, following a year in which she scored for Yorkshire in the County Championship final held at Twickenham Stadium, represented England U18s against Wales U18s at the Principality Stadium, and signed for Premier 15s side Loughborough Lightning as well as being part of a winning World Deaf Rugby Sevens Championship side.[9] In 2019 she earned her first senior England rugby sevens cap having previously played for the 15's and 7's England team at Under 18's level.[10] In doing so she became the world's first-ever deaf female rugby sevens player to be selected for a full international and the first deaf female rugby player to play for a senior England side.[11][12] Awarded a full-time England 7s contract she made her World Sevens Series debut in Glendale, Colorado, and scored her first try in the event in Cape Town, South Africa, in December 2019.[13]
In February 2020 Ounsley was included in the GB Women rugby sevens provisional squad for the 2020 Summer Olympics.[14] She won the Deaf Sports Personality of the Year 2020 award.[15] In July 2020 Ounsley joined Premier 15s side Sale Sharks Women.[16] In 2022 she signed for Exeter Chiefs Women.[17] She injured her shoulder in the first game of the 2023-24 Allianz Cup and missed seven months of the season but returned to the Exeter side in April 2024 at the competition's semi-final stage for their match against Saracens Women.[18]
In April 2024, Ounsley reportedly was stepping out of the Rugby sevens, due to the injury, and her will to "pursue new opportunities".[19]
In May 2023, Ounsley was named as ‘Fury’, one of the new Gladiators in a reboot of the television series of the same name to be broadcast on BBC One.[20][21] Both the female finalists of the rebooted series named Fury as the toughest opponent they faced.[22] The success of the series has been credited in part to the popularity of new Gladiators like Sabre, Diamond and Fury.[23]
Her father Phil was a former professional mixed martial artist and took part in the 2008 Gladiators Reboot on Sky One.[24] Her younger brother also played rugby.[25][26] Ounsley is an ambassador for The Elizabeth Foundation charity, a pre-school nursery for deaf children.[27][28] In 2021 Ounsley launched Not Just Anyone (NJA), a story telling platform designed to inspire younger generations.[29][30] She is the Honorary President of UK Deaf Sport, in 2023 she was named among Woman's Hour Power List 2023 Women in Sport.[31]