Paralympics
PARALYMPICS LONDON 2012: Great Britain schedule – Saturday September 8th

Posted: Saturday 8th September 2012 | 9:42
ELLIE Simmonds goes for a golden treble in the pool when she defends her S6 100m freestyle. Having won the 200m and 400m titles earlier this week, the teenager hopes to complete the hat-trick and surpass her double gold from Beijing.
GOLDEN GIRL: Ellie Simmonds is looking for her third gold medal when she defends her 100m freestyle title at the London 2012 Paralympics
Javelin thrower Nathan Stephens seeks Paralympic gold on the final day of athletics action in the Olympic Stadium.
David Smith is certain of either silver or bronze in boccia’s BC1 final, while Stephen McGuire plays for bronze in the BC4 event.
Britain’s men aim to finish with a wheelchair basketball medal as they take on USA in the bronze match at North Greenwich Arena.
Medal prospects
Athletics: Four athletes are looking to add to Britain’s 27 athletics medals on the final day of London 2012 action in the Olympic Stadium.
In the field, Stephens seeks Paralympic gold in the F57/58 javelin after taking the 2011 world title in New Zealand.
On the track, with heats in the morning, Athens silver and Beijing bronze medallist Hazel Robson aims to regain the T36 100m gold she won in Sydney. Robson was fourth in the 200m.
Two 18 year old Paralympic debutants, Rhys Jones and Jamie Carter, compete in the men’s T37 100m and T34 100m respectively.
Boccia: David Smith is guaranteed his second Boccia medal of the Games and is looking for revenge over Pattaya Tadtong – part of the Thailand line-up that beat Smith’s quartet in the team event – in the BC1 final at 13:25.
Scotsman Stephen McGuire – who won silver at the 2010 World Championships in Lisbon – plays for BC4 bronze, against world no. 1 Eliseu Dos Santos of Brazil at 10:35.
Cycling Road: David Stone dominated the road races in Beijing, winning golds in his T1-2 class of time trial and road race. After taking bronze in the time trial on Thursday he goes for a second medal in the road race, in a 24km race starting at 10:32 at Brands Hatch.
Lora Turnham and her pilot Fiona Duncan race in the tandem road race event for visually impaired riders after they finished seventh in the time trial. They start their 80km race at 10:30.
Swimming: Simmonds defends her S6 100m freestyle title with Natalie Jones also chasing a medal in that event. Louise Watkins hopes to improve from Beijing bronze in the SB9 100m breaststroke, as does Matt Whorwood in the men’s S6 100m freestyle.
Britain also has hopes in the men’s 4x100m medley relay (34pts), while Jack Bridge and Harriet Lee go in the men’s and women’s S10 100m breaststroke, and Anthony Stephens competes in the men’s S5 100m free.
Wheelchair Basketball: Britain’s men play USA, attempting to retain the bronze medal they won in Athens and Beijing. After losing to Canada in the semi-finals, the GB side will have to pick themselves up for one last effort in front of 6,000 fans at the North Greenwich Arena.
USA beat Britain in the last seconds of overtime in the bronze match at Sydney 2000.
Wheelchair Fencing. David Heaton returns to Paralympic competition alongside newcomers Craig McCann and Simon Wilson in the men’s team foil. Heaton has competed in four previous Games in the epee and sabre events, but retired for six years after Athens where he was a Sabre quarter-finalist.
The men will take on Hong Kong in their quarter-final at ExCeL, starting at 11:00, with possible semi-finals and final to come.
Other British teams and athletes in action
Football five-a-side: Britain play Turkey for seventh place at 09:00 at the Riverbank Arena, following their penalty shoot-out defeat to China two days ago.
Wheelchair Rugby: Having missed out on the semi-finals, Great Britain face Belgium at 09:30, with the winner playing either Sweden or France at 21:15 for fifth place overall. The losers play at 19:00 for the right to be ranked seventh.
© 2012
Paralympics
Paralympians deserve Queen’s Honours parity

ParalympicsRelive Beijing
ALL Paralympic gold medallists should have received New Years Honours, according to the British Paralympic Association.
PARITY: Paralympics GB chief executive Phil Lane OBE and gold medallists Eleanor Simmonds MBE and Lee Pearson CBE (Getty Images)
Every Olympic gold medallist received recognition in the list released today but there was not parity with the Paralympics – although more Paralympians, 18 in total, were honoured than ever before.
Great Britain finished second in the Paralympic medal table behind hosts China – winning 102 medals, including 42 golds.
“We are delighted to see these Paralympic athletes recognised in the honours list for their contribution to British sport and their magnificent achievements,” said ParalympicsGB chairman Tim Reddish, who was awarded a OBE for his work as the Performance Director for British Disability Swimming
“We are however very disappointed that not all the Beijing 2008 Paralympic gold medallists could be recognised but we look forward to more athletes being honoured in the future.”
Phil Lane, Great Britain’s Paralympic chef de mission, was awarded an OBE.
He said: “I am shocked but honoured to be named in the New Year’s Honours List.
“2008 has been a superb year for British Paralympic sport and I’m proud of the team’s achievements leading into and at the Beijing Games.
“I’m fortunate to lead an organisation with very able staff and extremely talented athletes, whose efforts made our Beijing Paralympic campaign such a success and I would like to dedicate this accolade to them.”
Lee Pearson, who has now won nine equestrian dressage golds, and swimmer David Roberts – Britain’s most successful male Paralympian with 11 golds – were both upgraded to CBEs.
And 14-year old Eleanor Simmonds became the youngest ever recipient of an MBE for her double swimming gold.
RELATED: Paralympic teenager Simmonds awarded MBE
RELATED: Double gold medallist Adlington awarded OBE
Paralympics
PARALYMPICS LONDON 2012: Wheelchair tennis star Norfolk named as Great Britain’s flag bearer

DOUBLE Paralympic champion Peter Norfolk has been named as Great Britain’s flag bearer for next week’s London 2012 opening ceremony.
PROUD: Peter Norfolk, dubbed the quadfather, is a two-time Paralympic champion and will carry the British flag at the opening ceremony at London 2012
Wheelchair tennis player Norfolk won quad singles gold in Athens and Beijing and has also a doubles silver and bronze in his collection.
He arrives in London ranked world number three in singles and number one, alongside Jamie Burdekin, in doubles.
“I’m absolutely blown away to be selected as the British flag bearer for the opening ceremony,” he said.
“It was a huge surprise when I was told and I feel it is a very great honour.
“I can feel the excitement is really building as everyone is talking about the Games and getting behind the athletes wishing them luck.
“I’m very humbled to lead in the ParalympicsGB team that I’m sure can make Great Britain very, very proud.
“This will be my first opening ceremony as my playing schedules have meant I missed the other two so this will be an especially magical moment for me.”
British chef de mission Craig Hunter is still negotiating with organising committee officials about the size of the home delegation at the ceremony.
He expects between third and half of the 300-strong team to be involved but has been seeking assurances over transport from the athletes’ village to the stadium.
“To carry the flag at the head of the team at any Games is a unique honour but this is made even more special because it will be in front of a home crowd,” said Hunter.
“Pete has been selected following a vote from his fellow team-members so this is true recognition of his outstanding sporting achievement.”
© 2012
Paralympics
PARALYMPICS LONDON 2012: Our greatest of days witnessed through disbelieving eyes

By James Toney, , at the Olympic Stadium
AND that was that, a summer like no other now consigned to the pages of history. A cherished memory of endless days and golden glory witnessed through often disbelieving eyes.
HOME HEROES: David Weir and Sarah Storey carry the British flag at the conclusion of the London 2012 Paralympic Games
Did it really happen? Yes it did and we were there, right in the middle of the melee – cheering from stands and sofas for athletes who just a few weeks ago many didn’t even know but whose names are now indelibly stained on the national sporting consciousness.
London’s Olympic Park, which once bustled with excitement and anticipation, falls silent, its greatest days forever behind it.
But before reality bites, one last party, one last chance to cheer and one last chance to shed a tear.
Snaking through London on Monday will be a convoy of Olympians and Paralympians who proves more than any dancing dog, lithe limbo dancer or giggly girl band that Britain really has got talent.
They will stop the traffic just as they have stopped the world and all they ask, all they deserve, is one last rousing ovation before they take their leave of the stage.
The legacy of these weeks will take time to assess and we’ll need to wait some years to find out whether a generation was really inspired.
For the Paralympics this is uncharted territory as people finally forgot disability and saw only ability.
There is nothing special about David Weir or Sarah Storey or Ellie Simmonds other than their sporting talent.
In recent days Paralympic sport has become mainstream, the athletes of these Games have become A listers, knocking football off the back pages and topping the bulletins.
But realism triumphs over optimism and how long will this last?
Over the last week over 1.5 million people have crammed into the Olympic Stadium, packing it to its rafters every morning and evening, to witness Paralympic athletics push the boundaries ever further. And it was quite a thing.
At last year’s World Championships in Christchurch, the daily attendance was barely 2,000 and that comprised mainly of competitors and their families. They couldn’t even be bothered to close the roads for the marathon and the action was broadcast only on he internet.
No-one in the Olympic or Paralympic movement wants to merge their Games or change their running order.
The Olympics remains the best possible warm-up act, it’s not patronising or condescending for the Paralympics to follow, as recent days have proved it does not make them second best, far from it.
But perhaps it’s time to consider whether Paralympic athletes can compete alongside non-disabled athletes in other major championships, for example the World Athletics Championships.
Until Paralympic sport is fully embraced, until it gets the airtime, the sponsorship and the exposure it will struggle to gain traction in a cluttered sporting landscape of big-money transfers and not that Super Sundays.
And that must be the challenge.
But if we meet that confrontation in the same way the athletes of these Games conquered the obstacles in their path, this could really be the start of something special.
And, don’t forget, it all started here.
© 2012
Paralympics
PARALYMPICS LONDON 2012: British team upbeat despite missing target of second place on medal table

BRITISH Paralympic Games chiefs have lauded the performance of their athletes at London 2012 despite falling just short of reaching the medal table target they set.
STAR NAME: Sarah Storey won four golds to take her career tally to 11, in cycling and swimming, establishing herself as one of the faces of the London 2012 Paralympics
Funding agency UK Sport issued three pre-Games ambitions – winning more medals than Beijing, in more sports and finishing second on the medal table.
But it’s a case of two out of three as Russia look likely to pip to edge the hosts into third, although only just.
“The bottom line is we have smashed our medals target and we have delivered medals in more sports,” said British Paralympic Association performance director Penny Briscoe.
“For instance in table tennis we delivered four medals after none in Beijing, and there was our first ever sailing medal.
“We are third in the medal table and that does rankle just a tad in terms of the total golds, but I think it is significant that we are ahead of all of our competitors apart from China in terms of overall medals.
“We have stood toe-to-toe with the best nations slugging it out and it has been a battle. We have seen the return of USA and Australia and been at the hands of the dominant Chinesem who once again have laid down some phenomenal performances.
“It has been the most competitive Games ever with six nations likely to finish with 30 golds or more in the table.
“We have no regrets, absolutely not. I don’t think there is any reason not to believe we don’t have the potential or the ambition to continue to try and chip away at China’s total in the future.”
Briscoe, speaking at a press conference at ParalympicsGB House to mark the close of London 2012, described the team’s pride at the achievements of a new wave of British heroes.
And she made her point sat alongside double track gold medallist Hannah Cockroft, four-times gold medallist Sarah Storey and Helena Lucas, who claimed the nation’s first ever Paralympic sailing medal with gold in Weymouth.
“No medal has been easy and even those athletes that haven’t achieved medals have put in some fantastic performances,” added Briscoe.
“The statistic is a British medal once in every four events that have been held.
“The likes of Sarah Storey, David Weir and Ellie Simmonds have continued to deliver at the highest level. Then we have had debutantes such as Hannah with two amazing medals on the track.
“The performance of British athletes in London has been exceptional. World standards have taken a rise that we didn’t think possible coming into the Games.
“We are incredibly proud of the achievements of the athletes. It has been very successful, hard fought and we should all be proud.”
© 2012
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