From
Broulee, New South Wales, Hancock-Cameron attended Moruya High School and trained as a junior at Bankstown Sports Club and worked with Anda’e Kalemusic as coach. She represented Australia at the
2018 Youth Olympics in
Buenos Aires and won the age-group Australian Cross-Country Championships in 2019. That year, Hancock-Cameron ran 4.16.04 for the
1500 metres. She won the Australian U20 title over that distance in April 2021, and improved her personal best with a time of 4:12:4 to move to sixth on the all-time Australian U20 list on 5 June 2021, at the Oceania invitational on the Gold Coast, the substitute event organised for the junior Australian team who were selected to compete at the World U20 Championships but to which Australia ultimately did not send a team due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. In June 2022, she won the bronze medal in the 1500 m at the
2022 Oceania Athletics Championships in
Mackay, finishing behind
Claudia Hollingsworth and
Abbey Caldwell in an Australian sweep of the medals. That year, she set a new personal best for the 800 metres and won in England over that distance in 2:02.78 at the British Milers Club in Manchester on 27 June 2023. In April 2026, she placed fourth over 800 metres and fifth over 1500 metres at the Australian Championships. Later that month, she set a new
Australian national and
Oceania area record in retaining her national title in the road mile, running 4:26.4 at the Australian Road Mile Championships in Ballarat, surpassing the previous record of 4:32.45 held by
Jessica Hull. She was selected as part of the Australian team to compete at the
2026 Oceania Athletics Championships over both 800 metres and 1500 metres in
Darwin, Northern Territory. == References ==