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Olympics to Paralympics Part 2

09/21/08

Permalink 02:43:37 pm, Categories: Paralympics

Now we are beginning to see sports where the use of prosthetics are needed and are visible

 

 Paralympics archeryEric Bennett of the U,S.

Paralympics archeryLear Chuck of the U.S.  Photos: Jeremy Campbell of US wins Men's Pentathlon P44 gold

 

Campbell of USA Wins Pentathelon

 

                                           

 

image_thumb4_thumb Table tennisStanding and sitting competing in table tennis

 

We're are now coming to the sports that require Speed.  A prosthetic leg that will allow a man to run 100 meters under 11 seconds . A wheelchair so light and responsive that a basketball player can weave and turn through defenders with speed yet remain durable in a physical game. Or a racing chair which a marathoner will complete more than 26 miles in less than 90 minutes . The athletes below are using these technologically advanced prosthetics and wheelchairs but the skill still remains with each individual athletes to make the most of this.

Track and field Joy in achievement of goals

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Oscar Pistorius of South Africa (right) runs ahead of Ian Jones of Britain (center) and Jim Bob Bizzell of the United States during the men's 400m T44 final. Pistorius won the gold medal in this category.

By: Associated Press

Oscar Pistorius of South Africa (right) runs ahead of Ian Jones of Britain (center) and Jim Bob Bizzell of the United States during the men's 400m T44 final. Pistorius won the gold medal

 

Prado wins men's 100m T11 with new world record in BeijingVisually impaired runners work with  guide runners who are equally fast running togeather holding a tether. In field events they must have precise timing with coaches providing the verbal cues. Lucas Prado of Brazil, left, with his guide reacts after he won in the men's 100m T11 final competition

 

 Day 1Vlfredo Cuadrado (left) of Spain fights for the ball with Gustavo Maidana of Argentina in a five-a-side soccer match during the Paralympic Games at the Olympic Green Hockey Field

 

image_thumb71_thumbSimple Cycle

CyclingCycle duet

Track and fieldChariots of Fire

Track and fieldHere They Come

image_thumb3_thumbAccident !

 Paralympic Games - Basketball - Day 7

Australia's Shaun Norris (right) looks to shoot under pressure from Matt Scott

 

 

 

 

Matt cott pressuring Aussie's shooter

 

 Paralympic Games - Basketball - Day 7championship game

 Paralympic Games - Basketball - Day 7

 U.S. beats Germany for gold medalUS Woman's Basketball beats Germany for gold

 

Changes in wheelchair's for tennis players came after basketball and racing but they now have their own wheelchair designed to meet the needs of the game.The chairs are very efficient and allow easy fast push and turn.

 TennisForward Smash

 TennisServe

 Tennisback return

 

Esther Vergeer hasn't lost in 345 matches of wheelchair tennis.

Esther Berger from the Netherlands is her countries best wheelchair tennis player. She had not lost a match in the Last 345 matches she has played . However she did lose her first here.But she came back to win Gold.

 

 

Paralympic Games - Tennis - Day 8Bronze-medal winner France's Florence Gavelliern (right), the Netherlands' gold-medal winner Esther Vergeer (center) and silver-medal winner Korie Homan celebrate their win at the women's wheelchair tennis singles award ceremony at the 2008 Paralympic Games

 

 

 

image_thumb11_thumb[1]image_thumb_thumb[1]nt size="5"> Quad Rugby, aka wheelchair Rugby, aka Murder ball.  Murderball is also the name and subject of a terrific documentary you can find at the library.  Oh what those quadriplegics can do!  You've got to watch them go...  (And they don't wear helmets no matter what.)

Jamie McDonald/Getty ImagesUS wins gold in Wheelchair Rugby

 

Closing Ceremony

 Closing ceremony flags

 

Photo: Thousand-handed Kwan-yin

Artists perform at the Closing Ceremony of Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games in the National Stadium, also known as the Bird's Nest.

 

Photo: Beautiful fireworks

Of course there were great fireworks at the Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games Closing Ceremony.

Photo: The extinguished flame

And the torch is extinguished for another four years

 

The one big difference between the Paralympics and the Olympics was the overwhelming attendance at the Paralympics.  The Birds Nest and the Water Cube was filled with enthusiastic crowds, cheering on the athletes as they performed with pure joy at what they could do!

1 comment

Comment from: SolShine7 [Visitor] Email · http://www.thinkvirtue.com
Great post! It would super to attend an Olympics and Paralympics game one day.

By the way, cool blog.
09/29/08 @ 01:59

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