At the Paris Paralympic Games, South Africa’s compact team of 20 athletes has already secured five medals, including two gold and three bronze, demonstrating remarkable performance despite competing in fewer sports and with fewer participants compared to their seven-medal haul in Tokyo, Cape {town} Etc reports.
Also read: Mpumelelo Mhlongo sets world record, misses Paralympic medal
According to Team SA, with sprinter Mpumelelo Mhlongo and discus thrower Simone Kruger clinching two gold medals in France, South Africa’s Paralympic team has already outshone their Olympic counterparts, who secured one gold, three silver, and two bronze at the previous month’s Games.
In addition to their impressive medal count, the Paralympic team reached significant milestones.
Notably, Lucas Sithole and Donald Ramphadi’s victory in the wheelchair tennis quad doubles marked South Africa’s first tennis medal since the country’s re-entry into international sport three decades ago.
Their triumph came with a win over Brazil in the bronze medal match held on the prestigious clay courts of Roland-Garros.
Earlier in the day, cyclist Pieter du Preez earned a bronze medal in the men’s H1 individual time trial, adding to the impressive achievements of South Africa’s Paralympic team.
These podium finishes followed sprinter Mpumelelo Mhlongo’s gold in the 100m T44 final last Sunday.
Regular Soweto Marathon participant Louzanne Coetzee also contributed to the team’s success, securing a silver medal in the 1,500m T11 class on Monday.
Coetzee, along with her guide Estean Badenhorst, clocked a personal best time of 4:35.49, shaving five seconds off her previous record set at the 2020 Tokyo Games.
Meanwhile, 19-year-old Simone Kruger continued to build momentum for the team on Friday, winning gold with a throw of 38.70m in the women’s discus throw F38 class final.
Her remarkable performance set a new Paralympic record.
Mhlongo also set a new world record in the long jump, despite falling short of a medal in the men’s long jump final on Wednesday with a fifth-place finish in the T64 competition.
His effort of 7.12m set a new world mark in the T44 class.
The 30-year-old, born with amniotic band syndrome and a deformed club foot, competed in the T44 classification, which includes athletes with mild limb loss or muscle weakness in the legs, without prosthetics.
Mhlongo launched another bid for a medal in the 400m T64 late last night, earning a bronze medal.
The T64 classification, in contrast, is for those with one leg missing below the knee.
While medals eluded Team SA swimmers, they set new African records.
Kat Swanepoel clocked 49.63 seconds in the women’s 50m backstroke S5 heats, and Nathan Hendricks posted a time of 2:17.15 in the men’s 200m IM SM13 final, both establishing new benchmarks for the continent.
Also read:
Paralympics social media faces backlash over ‘insensitive’ clips
Picture: Gallo