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Mixed fortunes for GB athletes after disputes



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Published Date: 15 September 2008
DAVID Weir and Rebecca Chin suffered contrasting emotions on day eight of the Paralympics – the wheelchair racer ended a 12-year wait extended by 24 hours for gold while the thrower was left in limbo by a reclassification ruling.

Weir finished first in the men's T54 800 metres final on Saturday night only for a protest over a lanes mix-up by Australia's Kurt Fearnley, the second-placed athlete, to deny him gold.

A rerun was ordered by the International Paralympic Committ
ee jury of appeal, but 12 hours later Fearnley performed a u-turn and the result stood, ending Weir's wait for his first gold in his third Paralympic Games.

Chin has not been so fortunate. The 16-year-old from Deganwy was reclassified after winning silver in the women's F37/38 discus and will return to North Wales with nothing – not even a category in which to compete in the Paralympics.

The medal fiascos overshadowed a day when Britain surpassed the gold medal target laid down by UK Sport when swimmers Eleanor Simmonds and David Roberts – winning his 11th Paralympic title to equal Tanni Grey-Thompson's mark – and wheelchair tennis ace Peter Norfolk won gold to take the tally to 41 and 90 medals in all.

Swimmer Matt Walker and archer John Cavanagh won silver, while Matt Whorwood and Louise Watkin, in the pool, and sprinter John McFall added bronze.

Chin, who was reclassified on the eve of the Games from the F44 category (as a les autres or other) to the F38 category (for those with cerebral palsy), has been denied a medal in her first Games – becoming the third British athlete after Shelly Woods and Weir to be embroiled in a medal mix up.

Chin, who was born with a lower limb impairment, was on course for Britain's first athletics gold before news of Weir's reinstatement broke and China's Mi Na won the discus with a final round world record throw.

The Briton initially won silver but the result was overturned following a ruling by the chief classifier.

The decision was bizarre after Chin's assessment on 5 September while she also competed in the women's F37/38 shot put final, finishing 10th on Thursday. However, the IPC insisted Chin was "not eligible, not matching the sport class profile" after she "showed significantly different skill sets" in the shot and the discus.

"If she was only a shot putter, then she'd be an F38," said British athletics team manager Tim Jones.

Chin was initially assessed in June at the national trials and Britain were assured her F44 categorisation was correct but a subsequent analysis placed her in the F38 class, despite having no previous medical evidence of cerebral palsy.

"It was a surprise," added Jones of the initial reclassification. "Medically, you're saying they've got a disability they weren't aware of."

After Chin's latest setback, Jones hopes for a future resolution.

"She's been a failure of the system," added Jones. "But the bottom line is that she's a 16-year-old kid and I really hope she's not going to get hung out to dry."

An agonising overnight wait for Weir, who made his debut in Atlanta before picking up 100m silver and 200m bronze in Athens, ended when Australia withdrew their protest.

The 29-year-old from Surrey was delighted to win his first Paralympic gold but wasn't in forgiving mood regarding Fearnley.

"He wanted a re-run at first and then he wrote a letter," added Weir, who will continue his rivalry with the Australian in his remaining events.

"He said sorry – it's a bit late."





The full article contains 606 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 14 September 2008 10:27 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: 2008 Olympics
 
 

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