Yesterday was a monumental day of fencing at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games!


Congratulations to Team USA's Lee Kiefer and Lauren Scruggs for Olympic Gold and Silver!


Congratulations to Amgad Khazbak, Sean McClain and Ralf Bißdorf!


Lauren and Sean, you have added to the greatness of the Fencers Club and Peter Westbrook Foundation history!


See below for a full article from USA fencing, or click here to read more!

Kiefer Repeats as Olympic Champion; Scruggs Earns Silver in Olympic Debut


They fenced in the first all-U.S. gold medal fencing final at the Olympics since 2008.


PARIS, France — Lee Kiefer (Lexington, Ky.) tried not to feel the pressure of repeating as Olympic champion, even while knowing deep down that earning a second Olympic gold medal would be tougher than earning her first.


“No matter how much I tried to prepare, there's still so much pressure I put on myself to just fence well and stay present,” she says.


Add in the distractions of fencing in front of an 8,000-person crowd, including many friends and family members who couldn’t watch her live in Tokyo 2020, and the stakes become even higher.


“It's so special to have my family (here), all my best friends who I haven't even seen,” she says. “I tried to spot them in the crowd. But it makes it so much fuller."


Kiefer, who fences for the Bluegrass Fencers’ Club in Kentucky, was already the first American woman or man to win gold in foil. Now she’s the first to do it twice, cementing her legacy as one of the greatest fencers in U.S. history.


She joins Mariel Zagunis (women’s saber gold in 2004 and 2008) as the only American fencers with two individual Olympic gold medals.


But the night’s history didn’t end there.


Kiefer’s opponent in the gold medal final was Lauren Scruggs (Queens, N.Y.). Scruggs, who fences for the Peter Westbrook Foundation and Fencers Club in New York City, becomes the first Black woman to win an individual fencing medal (of any color) for Team USA. 


She also becomes just the second American woman to win an individual medal (of any color) in foil, joining Kiefer.


“I'm definitely more happy than disappointed,” she says. “I generally would say I think it was shocking for me to be here in the first place. So I don't even think I've had time to process.”


Sunday’s matchup — won by Kiefer, 15-6, was the first all-U.S. Olympic gold medal final since Beijing 2008, when Mariel Zagunis defeated Sada Jacobson in the Women’s Saber individual final.


And it happened in one of the most picturesque fencing venues that any of the sport’s longtime fans have ever seen.


“This is insane,” Scruggs says. “Just seeing the sheer amount of people who are interested in fencing and who want to support fencers is just amazing, because we don't really have that in America. So, I'm just super grateful to be able to fence in front of such a big crowd and in such a beautiful space.”


The last all-American final in women's foil in any senior-level international fencing competition was in 2016, when Lee Kiefer fenced her Tokyo 2020 Olympic teammate Nicole Ross.


Kiefer becomes the third woman to win multiple Olympic gold medals in the women's individual foil event, after Valentina Vezzali (ITA, 3) and Ilona Elek (HUN, 2).


Path to the Podium


Round of 32 

Lauren Scruggs def. Amita Berthier (SGP), 15-13

Lee Kiefer def. Martyna Jelinska (POL), 15-13


Round of 16

Lauren Scruggs def. Jessica Zi Jia Guo (CAN), 15-11

Lee Kiefer def. Qianqian Huang (CHN), 15-9


Quarterfinals

Lauren Scruggs def. Arianna Errigo (ITA), 15-14

Lee Kiefer def. Flora Pasztor (HUN), 15-4


Semifinals

Lauren Scruggs def. Eleanor Harvey (CAN), 15-9

Lee Kiefer def. Alice Volpi (ITA), 15-10


Finals

Lee Kiefer def. Lauren Scruggs, 15-6