Christopher John FydlerOAM (born 8 November 1972)[citation needed] is a former competitive
swimmer[1] from Australia, who competed in three consecutive
Summer Olympics for his native country, starting in
1992. Fydler represented Australia at an international level from 1989 to 2000. During his career he amassed over 20 national championships including five consecutive national 100-metre freestyle championships. At the
Sydney 2000 Olympics, he was a member of the men's 4×100-metre freestyle relay team that defeated the Americans and won the gold medal with
Michael Klim,
Ian Thorpe and
Ashley Callus. It was the first time in Olympic history that the US team had been beaten in that event.
Since retiring from swimming in early 2001, Fydler has continued to be active in the swimming and Olympic families. He was a board member of
Swimming Australia Ltd from 2006 to 2010, was a member of the
FINA Disciplinary Panel in 2009-2017 and a member of its Ethics Panel 2018-2023, and is currently the President of Swimming NSW. He was also the Deputy Chef de Mission for the Australian Olympic Team competing in
2012 London Olympics and again at the
2016 Rio Olympics. Chris was also a been a board member of the
NSW Institute of Sport from 2017-2023.
For his significant contribution to Swimming in Australia over the last 30 years, Chris was awarded Life Membership of
Swimming Australia in 2020.
Chris graduated from
Bond University in 1997 with a BComm and Llb (Hons). He was admitted as a solicitor in New South Wales in January 1998. He practiced as a lawyer in Sydney from 1998 to 2003 before taking equity in a Sydney-based System Integration business Oriel Technologies. After Oriel Technologies was sold in 2016 to the Big Air Group (ASX:BGL), Chris had a short break before being appointed as CEO and then Managing Director of Tambla Ltd (formerly ComOps Ltd), a publicly listed Workforce Management software company.
After 5 years on its Board, Chris was appointed Chair of Pymble Ladies College in 2024.
Christopher John FydlerOAM (born 8 November 1972)[citation needed] is a former competitive
swimmer[1] from Australia, who competed in three consecutive
Summer Olympics for his native country, starting in
1992. Fydler represented Australia at an international level from 1989 to 2000. During his career he amassed over 20 national championships including five consecutive national 100-metre freestyle championships. At the
Sydney 2000 Olympics, he was a member of the men's 4×100-metre freestyle relay team that defeated the Americans and won the gold medal with
Michael Klim,
Ian Thorpe and
Ashley Callus. It was the first time in Olympic history that the US team had been beaten in that event.
Since retiring from swimming in early 2001, Fydler has continued to be active in the swimming and Olympic families. He was a board member of
Swimming Australia Ltd from 2006 to 2010, was a member of the
FINA Disciplinary Panel in 2009-2017 and a member of its Ethics Panel 2018-2023, and is currently the President of Swimming NSW. He was also the Deputy Chef de Mission for the Australian Olympic Team competing in
2012 London Olympics and again at the
2016 Rio Olympics. Chris was also a been a board member of the
NSW Institute of Sport from 2017-2023.
For his significant contribution to Swimming in Australia over the last 30 years, Chris was awarded Life Membership of
Swimming Australia in 2020.
Chris graduated from
Bond University in 1997 with a BComm and Llb (Hons). He was admitted as a solicitor in New South Wales in January 1998. He practiced as a lawyer in Sydney from 1998 to 2003 before taking equity in a Sydney-based System Integration business Oriel Technologies. After Oriel Technologies was sold in 2016 to the Big Air Group (ASX:BGL), Chris had a short break before being appointed as CEO and then Managing Director of Tambla Ltd (formerly ComOps Ltd), a publicly listed Workforce Management software company.
After 5 years on its Board, Chris was appointed Chair of Pymble Ladies College in 2024.