Tokyo Paralympics Digest: Australia off to golden start | DW | 25.08.2021
Paige Greco shaved eight seconds off a world record she had set just hours earlier to win the first gold medal of the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics for Australia.
Her victory in the C1-C3 class 3,000 metre individual pursuit, came at the expense of China’s Wang Xiaomei, who had to settle for silver despite breaking the world record herself in qualifying.
“It feels amazing,” Greco said. “I still can’t believe it. I keep looking down and seeing (the gold medal). It’s not really sunk in yet.”
Greco was born with cerebral palsy, which mostly affects the right side of her body. It was her first Paralympic Games medal.
Like all the athletes at this Games, Greco has had to wait another year to compete for her medal after the Paralympics were postponed for 12 months as a result of the coronavirus, with cases now surging once again in the Japanese capital.
Germany update
The first German medal of these Games also came in the C1-C3 class 3,000 metre individual pursuit, as Denise Schindler claimed bronze.
The 35-year-old, nicknamed the Killerbiene (Killer Bee), breezed past Clara Brown, of the USA, to win the bronze medal race to add a first track medal to road race silvers in Rio and London. After losing her lower leg as a child, Schindler races using a prosthesis made on a 3D printer.
Gold medals
There was more gold for Australia in the velodrome as Emily Petricola claimed the women’s C4 3,000m individual pursuit while Great British athlete Sarah Storey rode to victory in the women’s C5 3,000m individual pursuit and Dutchman Tristan Bangma secured his country a first gold in the men’s B 4,000m individual pursuit.
Australia’s sensational start continued in the pool, where Will Martin won the men’s 400m S9, while his compatriot Lakeisha Patterson won the women’s race.
News from Tokyo
Japan’s top medical adviser criticized International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach on Wednesday for visiting Tokyo again when the country is expanding emergency curbs to contain the COVID-19 pandemic.
“We had said over and over ‘What kind of message will the Olympics send to the public?'” Dr Shigeru Omi, the immunologist who chairs the government’s coronavirus advisory panel that approved the emergency plan, said in a parliamentary session.
“We’re asking people to work from home more. If (IOC) President Bach needs to give a speech (for the Paralympics), why couldn’t he do it remotely? Why does he have to bother coming all the way here?” Omi said in an unusual outburst for an authority figure in Japan.
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