Canada’s Smeenk, Gingras, Papaconstantinou race to Para athletics worlds medals | CBC Sports
Canada earned three more medals at the Para athletics world championships on Thursday.
Austin Smeenk and Zachary Gingras scored silvers, while Marissa Papaconstantinou rode a personal best to bronze.
Smeenk, of Oakville, Ont., earned his first career major championship medal earlier at the Paris meet when he took bronze in the T34 400-metre wheelchair race.
The 26-year-old impressed once again in the 100m with his time of 15.10 seconds, edging out reigning world champion Walid Ktila by one-one hundredth at the finish line.
“The race felt fantastic. The power to really execute the technique and trust my acceleration profile came from above the shoulders,” Smeenk said.
Thailand’s Chaiwat Rattana won gold with an Asian-record time of 15.01 seconds.
WATCH | Smeenk scores silver:
Gingras snagged his second-place finish in the men’s T38 400m race behind American Jaydin Blackwell, who set a world record of 48.49 seconds.
The Markham, Ont., native notched a personal-best time of 50.23 seconds to upgrade the bronze he won in the distance at the Tokyo Paralympics.
“As everyone knows, the 400’s a rough race regardless, but when it has an outcome like this it tends to be fun. So mixed emotion, I’m hurting, but enjoying the moment for sure,” Gingras said.
Iraq’s Ali Al-Rikabi won bronze.
Meanwhile, Toronto’s Papaconstantinou backed up her Paralympic bronze in the women’s T64 100m with one more in Paris.
The 23-year-old blazed out of the starting blocks, taking an early lead among a stacked field. However, the Netherlands’ Fleur Jong used her long strides to run away with the gold medal in 12.47 seconds, while Spain’s Sara Andres Barrio also passed the Canadian, taking silver at 12.83 seconds.
Papaconstantinou’s time of 12.95 seconds was enough to edge out Dutch runner Kiki Hendriks, who cross in 12.99 seconds.
“It feels good to come back a couple years later after Tokyo and have a similar finish. This time I was at the front of the race, so that was new for me. It felt pretty good to get out really quick,” Papaconstantinou said.
Later Thursday, fellow Canadians Zachary Gingras (T38 400m, 2:47 p.m. ET) and Anthony Bouchard T52 400m, 3:19 p.m. ET were scheduled to compete in medal races.
WATCH | Papaconstantinou races to bronze medal:
Watch live coverage of the World Para Athletics Championships on CBCSports.ca, the CBC Sports app and CBC Gem. Coverage from Paris continues Thursday with the Day 5 evening session.
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