Thursday, December 3, 2009

Pearson adamant he is on track for record-breaking Paralympics



EquestrianParalympics

By Nick Clowes, Sportsbeat

NINE-time Paralympic gold medallist Lee Pearson insists history counts for nothing as he continues his preparations for a potentially record-breaking London 2012 Games.

EXPECTATION: Paralympic star Lee Pearson admitted the pressure will be cranked up as he bids for a record-breaking 2012 challenge
EXPECTATION: Paralympic star Lee Pearson admitted the pressure will be cranked up as he bids for a record-breaking 2012 challenge (Getty Images)

Cheddleton-based para-equestrian star Pearson is bidding to be the first person to win three gold medals at four consecutive games and the early signs are good after an all-conquering 2009.

The 35-year-old scooped another three gold medals at the European championships in Norway in June and Pearson has now focussed his attentions on the World Equestrian Games in Kentucky next year.

But after admitting he felt the weight of expectation in Beijing last year, Pearson insists his previous record will be irrelevant when he goes for gold again in London.

"The pressure was on in Beijing so I can't even imagine what it will be like by the time London comes around," said Pearson.

"At the end of the day it is just about you and your horse and it doesn't matter what you have done before.

"There is so much attention around the Paralympics now in the run up to London and it's brilliant to be a part of it. We've campaigned for so long to get the recognition and now it's coming.

"The Great Britain team are the best in the world at para-equestrian and we are determined to stay there all the way up to 2012."

Pearson, who won his trio of Beijing gold medals on Gentleman, has added a new horse to his stable in 2009 - Zeon - and plans to give him his international debut at next summer's world games. Read more at...more than the games

On two wheels and determination




Disabled but not limited: Columbia cyclist aims for 2012 Paralympics
By JOEY HOLLEMAN - jholleman@thestate.com

Aaron Trent's little sister learned to ride a bike without training wheels before he did.

She was 5 and proud. He was 6 and frustrated.

It didn't matter that one of Aaron's legs was much shorter than the other, that his left arm and hand were bent from a cerebral palsy-like condition, making it hard to grasp handlebars. He was determined.

Columbia resident Aaron Trent took one silver and one bronze medal at the Para-Cycling World Championships recently in England. He spent most of the summer training with the U.S. Paralympic team in Colorado Springs, and his goal is to compete at the 2012 Paralympics, held in London immediately after the Olympics. PHOTO: Gerry Melendez/gmelendez@thestate.com

Columbia resident Aaron Trent took one silver and one bronze medal at the Para-Cycling World Championships recently in England. He spent most of the summer training with the U.S. Paralympic team in Colorado Springs, and his goal is to compete at the 2012 Paralympics, held in London immediately after the Olympics. PHOTO: Gerry Melendez/gmelendez@thestate.com

And before long, he had managed to teach his body to balance on a bike without training wheels.

Seventeen years later, "beating my sister no longer is the goal," Aaron said, smiling at his understatement.

Aaron, who earned one silver and one bronze medal at the 2009 Para-cycling Track World Championships this month, is aiming for the 2012 Paralympics in London. The 23-year-old Columbia resident took a break from classes at USC this school year to train at home and at the U.S. Paralympic team headquarters in Colorado Springs, Colo.

Much like that 6-year-old fixated on riding without training wheels, Aaron plans to put his entire focus on the 2012 event for the next two years.

"I want to do everything I can to ensure I'm as fast as I can be in London," Aaron said.

Peggy Trent, who home-schooled her son through high school, wholeheartedly approves of him putting college on hold to chase his dream. She used to work with a woman who gave up on an Olympic dream to move on with her life and later regretted it.

"You've got one shot at this, you need to go for it," Peggy Trent said. "You'll never know if you can do it if you don't try."

That attitude has been in place almost from the day 4-month-old Aaron suffered a severe allergic reaction to penicillin. The resulting stroke damaged the infant's brain, causing a condition similar to cerebral palsy.

The limbs on the left side of his body are smaller and malformed. For years, he wore out the top of his left shoe because he dragged that leg. His left hand was bent back toward his forearm, and his left elbow didn't flex properly. Surgery at age 12 straightened his wrist a bit and gave him more use of his left hand and arm.
Read more at...the state

Beijing 2008 Paralympics Pictures


Celebrating 1,000 days to go until the London 2012 Paralymic Games!




The London 2012 Games will see 20 Paralympic sports played in 21 venues across London and beyond, by 4,200 athletes over 12 days and are set to be a once-in-a-lifetime experience for athletes and spectators alike.

In fact, the Paralympic Games has its origins in Britain, as a sporting competition for World War II veterans with spinal injuries was organised at Stoke Mandeville Hospital in 1948 to coincide with London hosting the Olympic Games.

Source

Today, the Paralympic Games is the pinnacle of achievement for many disabled athletes. The London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) has planned both Games together for an unforgettable sporting spectacle that will last 29 days.

My journey from hospital to 2012 Games




Matthew Beard, Sports News Correspondent Matthew Beard, Sports News Correspondent
02.12.09
Few people can be more immersed in the build-up to London 2012 than Nikki Emerson.

The Oxford University graduate is tipped to make the Great Britain wheelchair racing team for the Paralympics just 18 months after breaking her back in a car accident.

Between training sessions, she has a full-time job with 2012 organisers at Canarf Wharf developing Olympic merchandise - from baby clothes to duvets - which will raise millions towards the cost of staging the Games.

The 21-year-old was inspired to train for the Paralympics after watching the Beijing Games on TV from her bed at the spinal injuries unit at Stoke Mandeville hospital in Aylesbury.

She said: "I was lucky because I had the Olympics and the Paralympics to watch and it was inspirational. I didn't have a moment when I wondered what I was going to do or what a horrible thing had happened to me, because it isn't. I was in hospital with people so badly injured they can only move their heads." British Paralympic champion Dame Tanni Grey-Thompson advised her that her best chance of success was wheelchair racing, building on her strength as a former endurance runner. She came ninth in the London marathon in April.

On a typical day she trains from 5am on rollers in the bedroom of her Aylesbury home before taking the 7am Tube to Canary Wharf. Post-work training sessions at Stoke Mandeville start at 8pm. Dame Tanni said: "She's got an amazing chance of making the Paralympics."

Tomorrow, there will be 1,000 days to go until the London Paralympics.

Source

Team GB still searching for 2012 Paralympic stars




Paralympic logos are displayed at the Olympic velodrome site with 1,000 days to go until the Games
Paralympic logos are displayed at the Olympic velodrome site with 1,000 days to go until the Games

Disabled athletes still have time to take up new sports and win gold medals at the 2012 Paralympics, says UK Sport's head of athlete development.

A talent search called Paralympic Potential is being launched with 1,000 days to go until the London Games.

"The ability to achieve a Paralympic Gold medal is a rare commodity," said UK Sport's Chelsea Warr.

"With hard work, dedication and the right coaching set up, we can make someone's dream a reality."

Research has shown that potential participants for a Paralympic Games can be ready to compete at an elite level much sooner than their Olympic counterparts.

In Beijing in 2008, 33% of British medallists had been part of their sports' elite programmes for less than two years and 15 of the 42 British gold medals were won by first time Paralympians.
David Smith
A new talent search hopes to find athletes like rower Smith

ParalympicsGB chief executive, Phil Lane, said: "Whilst we have come second in the medal table at the past four Games, there are many events that we simply haven't been able to field an athlete in.

"With the competition getting tougher all the time it is vital that we have explored all avenues to recruit new athletes."

The new campaign hopes to find athletes like Dave Smith, who won a world rowing medal within 12 months of taking up the sport and who is now aiming for London 2012.

Smith's hopes of competing in bobsleigh at the able-bodied Winter Olympics were frustrated by a fused ankle, which is classed as a "minimal disability".

"The switch to Paralympic rowing was a challenge for me, and I'm improving all the time," said Smith, 31, from Dunfermline.

"I was delighted to become a world champion in my first season and am completely focused on achieving success in 2012."

Source: BBC

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

As the torch passes from Beijing to London, a British newspaper celebrates with Paralympics pictures



From The Telegraph in the UK:


Thursday December 3 marks 1000 days to go to the lighting of the Paralympic flame in London in 2012. For the next three days, a blog a day will celebrate pictorially the passing of the flame from Beijing to London, with photos from four British photographers - Graham Bool, Roger Bool, Tom Griffth and George S Blonsky, which formed a joint exhibition after the Beijing Games.

Coverage of big events like the Paralympics is dominated by Getty, Reuters, AP and the rest of the world’s leading news and picture agencies, however, none of this could stop Graham and his young charges, Tom, 26, son Roger 24, and seasoned international photojournalist George S Blonsky from seeing their images snapped up by the Daily Telegraph, South Wales Press, and Disability Now, as well as several charity and non-governmental organizations.

At London 2012, Graham plans to field the team again with the added advantage of working on home ground.

Graham added: “I’m certain that London and the UK will rise to the challenge and show the world that when it comes to disability sport, accessible environments, transport, hospitality and organization, we can compete just as well as previous host nations.”

Source

Do you have Paralympic Potential?


Do you have Paralympic Potential?

Posted by: sportyhannah74 on: December 2, 2009


UK Sport along with ParalympicsGB are searching for sportsmen and women who have the potential to win Paralympic medals at the London 2012 Games.

If you can answer “yes” to the following questions then they want to hear from you;

* Do you have an impairment?
* Do you have a UK Passport (or are you eligible for one)?
* Are you aged between 15 and 35 years old?
* Do you have a sporting background in any sport?
* Do you have the desire, commitment and determination to win?
* Are you up for a once in a lifetime opportunity?

Paralympic Potential

Do you have Paralympic potential?

You can sign up by going to: http://www.uksport.gov.uk/forms/paralympic2012/. If you think that you have the potential, then you need to know that the closing date for signing up is Monday 11th January 2010.

Source

Learning disability ban lifted for 2012 Paralympics


from Bangkok Post
* Online news: Sports

Officials of the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) have voted to allow athletes with learning disabilities to compete again at the London 2012 Paralympic Games.

Officials of the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) have voted to allow athletes with learning disabilities to compete again at the London 2012 Paralympic Games.

The IPC general assembly gathering in Kuala Lumpur agreed Saturday to lift the ban which has been in place since the 2000 Sydney Games when the Spanish paralympic basketball team revealed that some of its players were not disabled.

The Spanish basketball team was ordered to return its Olympic gold medal after an investigation proved only two out of 12 players on the team suffered from a mental handicap.

"Today?s achievement is the outcome of a unique and excellent co-operation between sports governance and the scientific community," IPC President Philip Craven said in a statement.

"I wish all intellectual disability athletes the best of success in their attempt to set world class performances at future competitions," he added.

The IPC said there will be tough measures put in place to prevent potential cheating including the need to submit medical files and on-site testing.

Their inclusion will not reduce the number of athletes from other classes in events at the games, it added.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Wheelchair Sports Awards 2009: outstanding achievements of 2009 celebrated


The Wheelpower Awards, now a fixture on the disability sport calendar, celebrate the many levels of development and success enjoyed and aimed for year on year.
The first of the awards, Junior Male Achievement, went to Daniel Lucker, an outstanding young wheelchair racer, while the Junior Female Achievement was awarded to Laurie Williams, from wheelchair basketball.

Related Articles
Wheelchair Sports Awards 2009
Williams, 17, a fantastic talent, was a member of the Great Britain’s Women’s Team and helped them to win a bronze medal at the European Championships at Stoke Mandeville in August this year. Both awards were sponsored by CLM, one of the delivery partners of the 2012 Games, and were presented by Gemma Goulder of CLM.
There was no mistaking the confidence displayed by the award winner of the Best Female Newcomer, Jean Guild, (shooting), who insisted she not only wanted a medal at London 2012, but wanted nothing less than gold. Certainly, one to watch out for.
The Individual Male Achievement award went to the superb racer Mickey Bushell, who improves year on year. Ric Cassell from the British Wheelchair Racing Association collected the award on his behalf.
Coach of the Year went to Steph Trill, from wheelchair tennis. Trill has overseen the success at the Paralympic Games in Beijing for the Quad Tennis Team, followed up by success this year when the team took the gold medal at the Invacare World Team Cup Tennis in Nottingham.

Read more... telegraph

More than the games Summer SportsWinter SportsParalympicsRising StarsFeaturesBlogsThis WeekContact UsHomepageContact UsFollow us on TwitterJoin our Fa


Graeme Ballard determined to return to peak fitness ahead of new season
AthleticsParalympicsPost a comment
Posted: Monday 30th November 2009 | 14:09
BRITISH Paralympian Graeme Ballard insists his 2009 season was a job well done but with London 2012 looming large the sprint star won't be taking his foot off the gas just yet.


MORE TO COME: British Paralympian Graeme Ballard insists he is primed for a big season in 2010

After a disappointing showing at the Beijing Paralympics - Ballard finished sixth in the 200m in China - the 30-year-old saw his UK Athletics funding slashed completely.


But the Chorley AC star put that behind him this summer by notching the 200m qualification time for next year's IPC World Championships in New Zealand.

Ballard won bronze at his debut Paralympics in Athens in 2004 and despite a return to form this summer with a bronze at the Aviva London Grand Prix and two fourth-places at the Paralympic World Cup in Manchester, the sprinter admits there is much more to come.

"2009 has not been too bad to be honest," said Ballard. "I've managed to get the 200m qualifying time for the World Games in New Zealand in 2011 which was my main aim after Beijing.

"My training has been going pretty well, although I've been struggling with a back injury on and off since the Paralympics, so I've had that to contend with.

"But next year I want to try and get back to full fitness and see where it takes me. I desperately want to try and get back to where I was because I've won medals at the Paralympics before.

"I'm really looking forward to next year - it's going to be hard and tough for me but I'm back into the training and it seems to be going well."

The countdown to London 2012 reaches 1000 days on December 1, with Ballard aiming to make his third appearance on the Paralympic stage.

And the Chorley AC ace admits he is struggling to keep the showpiece tournament out of his mind.

"I'm really excited about 2012," added Ballard - who lowered his 200m personal best to 25.5 seconds at a Pendle AC Open Meeting on September 6.

"To have a Paralympics in your home country is pretty special and I think everyone wants to put on a good show. All of us want to do well in front of the home crowd and I'm just the same."

ATHLETICS: 'A very special moment' for local paralympic runner

Posted By SARA ROSS, THE PACKET AND TIMES

Posted 12 hours ago

Orillia's Rick Ball is about to get the chance of a lifetime -- twice.

The 44-year-old single leg amputee will have an opportunity to carry both the Vancouver 2010 Olympic torch and the 2010 Paralympic torch.

"I was talking to my mom last night and I said 'I've got to pinch myself.' I said to her I just can't believe all this is happening; it's crazy," Ball said. "I know it's going to be a very special moment in my life; something I will never forget."

Ball applied and was accepted to be one of the 12,000 RBC torch relay bearers.

He will carry the Olympic

torch 300 metres to Base Borden on Dec. 29, Day 61 of the relay. The relay began on Oct. 30 and ends Feb. 12. Today, the torch is in Baie- Comeau, Québec .

Although honoured to be selected as an Olympic torchbearer, carrying the 2010 Paralympic torch is much closer to Ball's heart.

Ball has used a prosthetic limb since losing his left leg below the knee in a 1986 motorcycle accident on Coldwater Road near Highway 11 in Orillia.

The three-time world record holder for full marathon, half marathon and 10 kilometre races, was asked by the Vancouver Organizing Committee to represent Ontario during the Lighting Ceremony in front of the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa on March 3.

The torch will travel through 10 cities before the games begin in Vancouver from March 12 to March 21, 2010.

"It's something special when you think of the people they could of picked from and they ended up picking me," Ball said. "It just makes me extremely honoured."

A single leg amputee, Ball said it is an honour to represent all of those with physical disabilities.

"When I'm running now I feel like I'm breaking ground for other disabled people to show them what's possible," he said. "I'm not just doing it for myself anymore."

Applications to carry the 2010 Paralympic torch are now open to the public. The Vancouver 2010 website says "Ball lives and breathes the International Paralympic Committee motto of Spirit in Motion."

"When I first read that statement, I got goose bumps," said Ball, who hopes to compete in the London 2012 Paralympic Games. "I thought it was quite the compliment."

If given the opportunity to tell his story during the lighting ceremony, Ball knows what he will say.

"I just want to tell the people the same thing I tell the students, to find your passion and follow through with it," Ball said.

"I guess I'm living proof that if you follow your dreams they can come true."

Sunday, November 29, 2009

A record-breaking detour




BY SARAH NAGEM, Staff Writer
CARY - Tucker Dupree didn't plan on this. He figured he'd be a typical college student at this point in his life. But there was something else in store for him.

Now Dupree, 20, who lost most of his vision three years ago, holds 25 American swimming records and is heading to Brazil this week to compete as part of the U.S. Paralympic swim team in the world championships.

Dupree's journey to this point has been rocky -- and inspiring.

In 2006, during his senior year of high school, Dupree was diagnosed with Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy, a rare disease that affects vision. He has lost about 85 percent of his eyesight in both eyes and depends on his peripheral vision to get around.

"It was like I woke up one morning and couldn't see out of my left eye," said Dupree, who trains at the Triangle Acquatic Center in Cary.

The diagnosis thwarted his post-high school plans. He had wanted to swim for a college team.

But Dupree's sight deteriorated so quickly that he had to turn in his driver's license during his senior year. Looking back, Dupree said, that was one of the hardest things about his ordeal.

"When you're in high school, that's giving up your independence," he said.

But since then, Dupree's life has taken a turn he never imagined. He didn't even start swimming seriously until high school.

Dupree has played the piano since he was 12 and was part of the drumline for the Garner High School marching band.

He didn't consider swimming until his older sister joined the school team. He had to wait for her at practice after school. Finally, he reluctantly gave it a try.

"I said, 'This is ridiculous,'" Dupree recalled. "Now I do it for a living."

Dupree said he wasn't a good swimmer at first. But he stuck with it and became one of the fastest swimmers on the school team. He joined the Raleigh Swimming Association.

After he lost his sight, a mentor turned him on to the Paralympics, Dupree said. The summer after he graduated high school, he juggled his classes at Wake Technical Community College and traveled to Vancouver for a meet, where he broke American records. Last year, he competed against hundreds of swimmers to earn a coveted spot in the 2008 Paralympics in China, held a week after the regular summer Olympics.

Dupree raised enough money to take his parents, his grandmother, his uncle and his sister and her friend to Beijing. He stayed in the area Michael Phelps and the rest of the U.S. team had been.

"It's cool to think that I started swimming at 15, and at 19 I was halfway around the world," Dupree said.

He finished fourth, fifth and sixth places in his events.

Last spring, Dupree enrolled in Gardner-Webb University in Boiling Springs, where he swam on the NCAA Division I team. But he decided to turn professional.

Now, Dupree swims up to four hours a day at the Triangle Aquatics Center and spends several hours a week lifting weights.

His coaches with the Raleigh Swimming Association have emphasized strength training to prepare him for Brazil, said coach Dan Ohm.

"We're trying to get him a little stronger, more powerful, to deal with these guys," he said.

Dupree is looking toward the 2012 Paralympic games in London.

Beyond that, he's not sure.

"I don't know if I'll go till 2016," Dupree said. "We'll see."

He wants to write a book about his experiences. And he wants to travel the country as a motivational speaker. He's already speaking to local groups.

In the meantime, his mother, Marlene Dupree, will continue to drive him to and from practice. She said she hopes her son's story will inspire others.

"All he does is eat, sleep and swim," his mother said.

Dupree said swimming has helped him get through the last few years. A solitary sport, being in the water gives him time to reflect.

"You stick your head in the water, and you don't talk to anybody," Dupree said.

Simmonds looks to add world titles to Paralympic golds


AMBITIOUS: With just over 1000 days to go before the Paralympics, Eleanor Simmond insists she is concentrating on the 'now' (swPIX.com)

The Walsall-born swimmer shot to prominence in Beijing, winning double gold aged just 13 and in the process became Britain's youngest ever individual Olympic or Paralympic champion.

That success saw her become a household name overnight and more honours followed, including the 2008 BBC Young Sports Personality of the Year award. She was also made the youngest ever MBE in the New Year's Honours list.

And Simmonds - who turned 15 last month - hasn't rested on her laurels in the pool, scooping five gold medals at last month's European Disability Championships.

But while the London Paralympics are now nearly 1,000 days away, Simmonds is adamant that 2009, starting in Rio today, tops her agenda and not 2012.

"I'm not really thinking about 2012 yet," she said.

"We've got so many major competitions coming up in the years before then that we're not really focusing on London yet - we're more thinking of short term goals.

"But of course the whole team is looking forward to it. It's in the back of everybody's minds because the Paralympics in London is just going to be amazing but right now we've got other things to concentrate on.

"We flew out to Rio on Tuesday and I'm really looking forward to it. It's about 33 degrees, rather than the murky clouds in the UK, so hopefully I'll be able to come back with a tan and maybe some medals too.

"It's the first IPC short course World Championships but it should be a really good event - any chance to compete against the best in the world is what you want.

"I don't think I'll have too many problems going from long course to short course. The only thing is there will be 16 lengths in my 400m freestyle rather than eight and my turns aren't the best."

Despite her reluctance to talk about all things 2012, Simmonds could be targeting four individual gold medals in London, following her recent display in Reykjavik, that included world record number four, this time in the 200m medley.

The British team dominated the pool in Iceland capturing 39 golds, 32 silvers and 23 bronze medals to top the table. While Simmonds was happy with how things went, she knows things will be much harder in Rio.

"I was really happy with the Europeans. I was definitely going for titles in the 100m and 400m freestyle but it was a big shock to get gold in the 50m free and 200m medley," she added.

"To break the world record in the 200 medley as well was fantastic - I really wasn't expecting to do that.

"I'm now looking forward to Rio; it's a good way of seeing who's going to be a contender at the World Championships in Eindhoven next year as well.

"Iceland was only Europeans but there will be the Americans and Australians in Rio so it will be a lot more competitive.

"I'm expecting most of the people to be the same as in Beijing but there were a few new people in Iceland who I'd never heard of, so who knows."
Source : Chris Cottrell(Sportsbeat)