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Caz Walton OBE (born Carol Bryant; 1 February 1947) is a British retired wheelchair athlete and former Great Britain Paralympic team manager. She was a multi-disciplinary gold medallist who competed in numerous Paralympic Games. Between 1964 and 1976 she won medals in athletics, swimming, table tennis, and fencing. She took a break from the Paralympics, entering the basketball and fencing competitions in 1988.

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Walton enjoyed a lengthy competitive career, winning medals in European, Commonwealth, and World Championships.[1] She competed in a wide range of events, including athletics, table tennis, swimming, fencing, and basketball.[2][3]

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Walton began her Paralympic career at the 1964 Summer Paralympics in Tokyo. She took part in two athletics events, the slalom and the wheelchair dash, winning gold in both. At the 1968 Games in Tel Aviv Walton competed in numerous track and field disciplines, the breaststroke and backstroke in swimming, and singles and doubles in table tennis. She won at least a silver medal in all three areas, finishing the Games with six medals three of which were gold.[2]

Walton's most successful Paralympics was the 1972 Games in Heidelberg. She won two gold and one bronze medal in the athletics events and gold in the table tennis singles. She entered the fencing event rather than the swimming, winning the novice foil individual event. At the 1976 Games in Toronto Watson entered similar events, winning bronze in athletics, table tennis, and fencing.[2]

For the 1988 Summer Paralympics in Seoul, Walton opted to compete in the wheelchair basketball and fencing events.[3] Great Britain did not progress beyond the preliminaries of the basketball having lost all four matches,[4] but Watson achieved what would be her final medal when she won gold in the épée individual 4–6.[3] This took her total to ten Paralympic gold medals.[5]

Walton retired from international competitions in 1994.[1] She became the manager of Great Britain's Paralympic fencing team in 1996, reprising the role for the Games of 2000 and 2008. For the 2004 Games she was the team administrator for Great Britain.[5]

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In 1970 Walton received the Bill McGowran Trophy for Disabled Sports Personality of the Year from the Sports Journalists' Association.[6] She was appointed an OBE in 2010 for her services to disability sport.[7]

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Walton, Caz}} [[Categorie:Paralympisch kampioen]]


Elizabeth (Beth) Scott is a United States Paralympian. She learned how to swim at age 5, and in college was elected as captain of her college swim team (Ball State), where she also set school records and won a conference title. She earned a place on the Dean’s list while studying Sport Administration and Adapted Physical Education.

Beth earned 17 Paralympic medals (10 gold, 2 silver and 5 bronze) in three Paralympic Games between 1992 and 2000 (Barcelona, Atlanta and Sydney).

Sydney, 2000 2 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronze Atlanta, 1996 1 gold, 1 silver, 4 bronze Barcelona, 1992 7 gold,[8] seven world records

In 1993 and 1996, she was chosen as the USOC Blind Athlete of the Year.

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{{Bronvermelding anderstalige Wikipedia|taal=|titel=|oldid=|datum=|sectie=artikel}} {{references}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Scott, Elizabeth}} [[Categorie:Paralympisch kampioen]]



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{{[[Sjabloon:Infobox sportsperson |Infobox sportsperson]]}}

Dame Sarah Joanne Storey, DBE (born 26 October 1977), is a British road and track racing cyclist and former swimmer. She is a multiple gold medal winner at the Paralympic Games in both sports, and three times British (able-bodied) national track champion. Her total of fourteen gold medals makes her the most successful female British Paralympian of all time.

Storey's major achievements also include being a 27-time World champion (5 in swimming and 22 in cycling), a 21-time European champion (18 in swimming and 3 in cycling) and holding 72 world records.[9]

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Storey was born Sarah Bailey in Manchester[10] without a functioning left hand after her arm became entangled in the umbilical cord in the womb and the hand did not develop as normal.[11]

In 2007, she married tandem pilot and coach Barney Storey.[12] Storey gave birth to a daughter on 30 June 2013.[13] She and her husband live in Disley, Cheshire.[14][10]

Swimming at the Paralympic Games bewerken

Storey began her Paralympic career as a swimmer,[15] winning two golds, three silvers and a bronze in Barcelona in 1992. She continued swimming in the next three Paralympic Games before switching to cycling in 2005, reputedly because of a persisting ear infection.[16]

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At the 2008 Paralympic Games, her fifth, Storey won the individual pursuit – in a time that would have been in the top eight at the Olympic final[17] – and the road time trial.

Storey also competes against non-disabled athletes and won the 3 km national track pursuit championship in 2008, eight days after taking the Paralympic title,[18] and defended her title in 2009.[19] In 2014, she added a third national track title with a win in the points race.[20]

Storey qualified to join the England team for the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi, where she was "the first disabled cyclist to compete for England at the Commonwealth Games", against non-disabled cyclists.[21] She was also the second Paralympic athlete overall competing for England at the Games, following archer Danielle Brown earlier in Delhi.[22]

In 2011, Storey competed for one of the three places in the GB squad for the women's team pursuit at the 2012 Olympic Games. Although she was in the winning team for the World Cup event in Cali, Colombia in December 2011,[23] she was informed afterwards that she was being dropped from the team pursuit squad.[24]

London's 2012 Paralympics Games saw Storey win Britain's first gold medal, in the women's individual C5 pursuit.[25][26][27] She went on to win three more gold medals, one in the Time Trial C4–5 500m,[27] one in the Individual Road Time Trial C5[27] and finally one in the Individual Road Race C4–5.[28]

In 2014, Storey and her husband Barney Storey founded the Pearl Izumi Sports Tours International women's amateur cycling team, supporting the charity Boot Out Breast Cancer. The team fielded squads in the 2014 and 2015 British road race seasons.[29][30]

Storey attempted to break the world hour record at the Lee Valley VeloPark in London on 28 February 2015. She set a distance of 45.502 km, which was 563m short of Leontien Zijlaard-van Moorsel's 2003 overall world record – however Storey's distance did set a new world record in the C5 Paralympic cycling class as well as a new British record.[31]

In the Rio 2016 Paralympics Storey became Britain's most successful female paralympian when she won the C5 3000m individual pursuit final.[32]

Honours bewerken

Storey was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 1998 New Year Honours.[33] Following the Beijing Games, she was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2009 New Year Honours.[34] In 2012, she was awarded an honorary degree by the University of Manchester.[35] Following the 2012 London Games, she was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in the 2013 New Year Honours.[36][37]

Storey was a nominee for the 2008 Laureus World Sportswoman of the Year with a Disability and the 2012 BBC Sports Personality of the Year.[38]

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{{Bronvermelding anderstalige Wikipedia|taal=|titel=|oldid=|datum=|sectie=artikel}} {{Reflist|2}}

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{{DEFAULTSORT:Storey, Sarah}} [[Categorie:Paralympisch kampioen]]

  1. a b Hall of Fame. WheelPower. Geraadpleegd op 29 August 2012.
  2. a b c Athlete Search Results – Carol Bryant. International Paralympic Committee. Geraadpleegd op 29 August 2012.
  3. a b c Athlete Search Results – Carol Walton. International Paralympic Committee. Geraadpleegd op 29 August 2012.
  4. Seoul 1988 Paralympic Games Wheelchair Basketball Women. International Paralympic Committee. Geraadpleegd op 30 August 2012.
  5. a b Caz Walton. Paralympians Club. Geraadpleegd op 29 August 2012.
  6. Past winners of the SJA British Sports Awards. Sports Journalists' Association. Geraadpleegd op 29 August 2012.
  7. "Amy Williams & Tony McCoy top Birthday honours list", BBC News, 11 June 2010. Geraadpleegd op 30 August 2012.
  8. Barcelona 1992. International Paralympic Committee. Geraadpleegd op 29 april 2011.
  9. Dame Sarah Storey DBE profile Team Storey Sport.
  10. a b "Every little helps: Paralympic champ Sarah backs supermarket's campaign to stop families going hungry", Manchester Evening News, 4 July 2014.
  11. Bull, Andy, "Sarah Storey: From Paralympic swimmer to Commonwealth cyclist", 1 October 2010.
  12. Moreton, Cole, "Paralympics 2012: Golden couple powered by love", The Daily Telegraph, 1 september 2012.
  13. Daily Mirror website
  14. "Sarah Storey becomes first athlete to get four stamps", BBC News, 6 september 2012. Geraadpleegd op 5 december 2012.
  15. "Sarah Storey Pursuing More Paralympic Glory in Beijing" 12 March 2008
  16. Sarah Storey profile at Laureus.com, accessed May 2010
  17. Results at cyclingweekly.co.uk
  18. Profile at www.inspirationalspeakers.co.uk
  19. "Storey on top as Pendleton shines"
  20. National Track Championships: Four golds for Varnish & Skinner. BBC Sport. Geraadpleegd op 14 december 2014.
  21. "InterviewSarah Storey: From Paralympic swimmer to Commonwealth cyclist", The Guardian, 1 October 2010
  22. "The Paralympian taking on able-bodied athletes", The Independent, 2 October 2010
  23. "GB trio secure gold at World Cup", BBC News.
  24. "Storey dropped from Olympic squad", BBC News.
  25. Paralympics 2012: Sarah Storey wins third London gold. Geraadpleegd op 5 september 2012.
  26. "London Paralympics 2012 – day one: as it happened", The Guardian, 30 August 2012
  27. a b c Gallagher, Brendand, "Sarah Storey claims golden hat-trick with time trial victory at Brands Hatch", Telegraph Media Group, 5 september 2012. Geraadpleegd op 6 september 2012.
  28. Sarah Storey storms to landmark 11th Paralympics gold. BBC Sport. Geraadpleegd op 6 september 2012.
  29. Press release: PEARL IZUMI BOOT OUT BREAST CANCER TEAM LAUNCH. Pearl Izumi (10 Mar 2014). Geraadpleegd op 19 juni 2015. "This weekend saw the official launch of the Pearl Izumi Boot out Breast Cancer team. The team, led by Sarah Storey and managed by Barney Storey is made up of nine riders and the team will be riding in the major UK events, including National Road, Time Trial and Track Championships, National Road Series, Tour Series, Ride London and the Milk Race, as well as seeking to gain invitation places in some key UCI races."
  30. Dame Sarah Storey DBE. Team Storey Sport. Sarah and Barney Storey. Geraadpleegd op 19 juni 2015. "2014 saw Sarah and Barney launch their own women's cycling team riding in aid of Boot Out Breast Cancer. The team, Pearl Izumi Sports Tours International, dominated the UK domestic racing scene in their first season and are set to ride in 2015 with an even stronger line up."
  31. Sarah Storey fails in women's hour record bid at London velodrome. bbc.co.uk (28 February 2015). Geraadpleegd op 28 February 2015.
  32. Sport, Saj Chowdhury BBC, Rio Paralympics 2016: Dame Sarah Storey wins 12th Paralympic gold medal. BBC Sport. Geraadpleegd op 9 september 2016.
  33. {{London Gazette}}
  34. {{London Gazette}}
  35. "Paralympian Sarah Storey honoured by Manchester University", BBC News, 10 december 2012.
  36. Order of the British Empire. Cabinet Office (29 december 2012). Geraadpleegd op 29 december 2012.
  37. {{London Gazette}}
  38. BBC Sport: Bradley Wiggins wins BBC Sports Personality of the Year (accessed 17 December 2012)