Australia at the 2016 Summer Paralympics
Australia competed at the 2016 Summer Paralympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, from 7 to 18 September 2016. Australia repeated its 2012 Summer Paralympics achievement in finishing fifth of the medal tally.
Australia at the 2016 Summer Paralympics | |
---|---|
IPC code | AUS |
NPC | Australian Paralympic Committee |
Website | www |
in Rio de Janeiro | |
Competitors | 176 in 16 sports |
Flag bearer | Brad Ness (Opening) Curtis McGrath (Closing) |
Medals Ranked 5th |
|
Summer Paralympics appearances (overview) | |
Notable achievements at the Games:
- Jessica Gallagher became the first Australian Paralympian to win medals at the both the Summer Paralympics and Winter Paralympics by winning a bronze medal in cycling.[1]
- Kurt Fearnley finished Paralympic his career with 13 medals including a silver and bronze in Rio. His silver medal in the Men's Marathon T52-54 meant he had won medals in this event at four successive Paralympics (2004-2016).[2]
- Ellie Cole joined the list of leading Australian Paralympic medallists by winning six medals - 2 gold, 3 silver and 1 bronze. Her medal tally at the end of Rio was 6 gold, 4 silver and bronze.
- Kieran Modra won a bronze medal in cycling and this meant that he had medalled at six Paralympics.[3]
- Samuel Von Einem won Australia first medal in table tennis since Terry Biggs won gold in 1984.[4]
- Jonathon Milne won Australia's first medal in archery since 1968.[4]
- Curtis McGrath and Katie Kelly became Australia's first gold medallists in paracanoe and paratriathlon respectively.[4]
- Dylan Alcott became only the fifth Australian Paralympian to win gold medals in two sports by winning two gold medals in wheelchair tennis. He previously won gold in wheelchair basketball.[5]
- Athletes and teams that won their event again in Rio were: Ellie Cole (swimming), Brenden Hall (swimming), David Nicholas (cycling), Carol Cooke (cycling), Daniel Fitzgibbon/Liesl Tesch (sailing) and the wheelchair rugby team.
Administration
In May 2015, the Australian Paralympic Committee (APC) announced Kate McLoughlin as the Chef de Mission. She replaced Jason Hellwig, the former APC CEO, who stepped down from the role.[6] The APC appointed Kurt Fearnley and Daniela Di Toro as team captains. 2004 Athens Games was the last time the team had captains.[7] Wheelchair basketballer Brad Ness was announced as the Opening Ceremony flag bearer at a ceremony at the Paralympic Village on 5 September 2016.[8] Curtis McGrath who lost his legs in the Afghanistan war and won Australia's first gold medal in paracanoe at the Games carried the Australian flag in the closing ceremony.[9]
Fundraising
The APC stated that it needed to raise $7 million to fund its Rio 2016 campaign. The majority of APC's funding to send Australian teams to major events originates from fundraising. In January 2016, it launched the Australian Paralympic Foundation to manage its fundraising. Cadbury made the first major donation of $1 million.[10] In the four-year period leading up to Rio, the Australian Sports Commission (ASC) provided $62 million in funding.[11] At the Team Launch, Prime Minister of Australia Malcolm Turnbull stated that the Australian Government had provided close to $65 million direct funding to support the 167 athletes with a disability in the lead-up to Rio."[12] To assist with funding raising, its broadcast partner Seven Network organized a Parathon on 5 March 2016.[11]
Official team launch
The Official Australian Paralympic Team Launch was held in Sydney on 20 June 2016.[13] The major dignitaries present were Prime Minister of Australia, Malcolm Turnbull, Federal Minister for Sport, Sussan Ley, the Shadow Minister for Sport, Jim Chalmers and the New South Wales Minister for Sport, Trade, Tourism and Major Events Stuart Ayres.[13] The Launch was held during the 2016 Australian Federal Election. There were more than 30 Rio hopefuls and representatives from each Australian Paralympic Team since 1960 in attendance.[13] Glenn Tasker, Australian Paralympic Committee President stated that "We are not just chasing medals, we are aspiring to shape attitudes and perceptions of disability and to build on the huge momentum and growth that the Paralympic movement is experiencing.”[13] Prime Minister Turnbull said: "I want to salute the achievements of all of our Paralympians past and present. I want to wish you all the best on the road to Rio. you are doing our nation such great service. We are with you, we are with you all the way, we back you all the way, all the way to Rio."[13]
Medallists
The following Australian competitors won medals at the games.
Multiple medallists
The following Australian athletes won multiple medals at the 2016 Paralympic Games:
Name | Medal | Sport | Event |
---|---|---|---|
Dylan Alcott | Wheelchair tennis | Men's quad doubles | |
Men's quad singles | |||
Angela Ballard | Athletics | Women's 4x400m Relay - T53-54 | |
Women's 100 m T53 | |||
Women's 400 m T53 | |||
Kyle Bridgwood | Cycling | Men's individual pursuit C4 | |
Men's road time trial C4 | |||
Ellie Cole | Swimming | Women's 4 x 100m freestyle relay 34 points | |
Women's 100 metre backstroke S9 | |||
Women's 4 x 100m Medley Relay 34 points | |||
Women's 400 metre freestyle S9 | |||
Women's 50 metre freestyle S9 | |||
Women's 100 metre freestyle S9 | |||
Carol Cooke | Cycling | Women's road race T1–2 | |
Women's road time trial T1-2 | |||
Madison de Rozario | Athletics | Women's 800 m T53 | |
Women's 4x400m Relay - T53-54 | |||
Alistair Donohoe | Cycling | Men's individual pursuit C5 | |
Men's road time trial C5 | |||
Timothy Disken | Swimming | Men's 100 metre freestyle S9 | |
Men's 50 metre freestyle S9 | |||
Men's 200 m Individual Medley S9 | |||
Maddison Elliott | Swimming | Women's 4 x 100 metre freestyle relay 34 points | |
Women's 50 metre freestyle S8 | |||
Women's 100 metre freestyle S8 | |||
Women's 100 metre backstroke S8 | |||
Women's 4 x 100 metre medley relay 34 points | |||
Kurt Fearnley | Athletics | Men's Marathon - T54 | |
Men's 5000m - T54 | |||
Brenden Hall | Swimming | Men's 400 m freestyle S9 | |
Men's 100 m freestyle S9 | |||
Men's 100 m backstroke S9 | |||
Isis Holt | Athletics | Women's 100m - T35 | |
Women's 200m - T35 | |||
Women's 4×100m relay - T35-38 | |||
Rheed McCracken | Athletics | Men's 100m - T34 | |
Men's 800m - T34 | |||
Lakeisha Patterson | Swimming | Women's 4 x 100 metre freestyle relay 34 points | |
Women's 400 metre freestyle S8 | |||
Women's 50 metre freestyle S8 | |||
Women's 100 metre freestyle S8 | |||
Women's 4 x 100 metre medley relay 34 points | |||
Women's 200 metre individual medley SM8 | |||
Susan Powell | Cycling | Women's individual pursuit C4 | |
Women's road time trial C4 | |||
Tiffany Thomas Kane | Swimming | Women's 100m Breaststroke SM6 | |
Women's 50 metre butterfly S6 | |||
Women's 50 metre freestyle S6 | |||
Women's 200 metre individual medley SM6 |
Team
List of team members as of 17 September 2016.
In the by discipline sections below, medallists' names are bolded.
* – Indicates the athlete competed in preliminaries but not the final relay.
Sport | Men | Women | Total | Paralympics debut |
---|---|---|---|---|
Archery | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Athletics | 23 | 22 | 45 | 20 |
Boccia | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
Cycling | 8 | 7 | 15 | 6 |
Equestrian | 0 | 4 | 4 | 3 |
Goalball | 0 | 6 | 6 | 1 |
Paracanoe | 3 | 3 | 6 | 6 |
Paratriathlon | 3 | 4 | 7 | 6 |
Rowing | 4 | 4 | 8 | 5 |
Sailing | 5 | 1 | 6 | 0 |
Shooting | 4 | 2 | 6 | 2 |
Swimming | 21 | 15 | 36 | 22 |
Table tennis | 2 | 3 | 5 | 3 |
Wheelchair basketball | 12 | 0 | 12 | 5 |
Wheelchair rugby | 12 | 0 | 12 | 4 |
Wheelchair tennis | 4 | 1 | 5 | 2 |
Total | 103 | 73 | 176 | 88 |
Australia was given additional qualification slots in the sports of goalball (six athletes), athletics (two athletes) and wheelchair tennis (one athlete) after Russia was suspended from the Games by the International Paralympic Committee.[14] Two athletes from the original team of 178 did not attend - Emily Tapp due to injury and Michael Gallager due to doping violation.[15]
Several team members have changed their previous Paralympic sports at these Games: Dylan Alcott (wheelchair tennis), Jessica Gallagher (cycling), Daniela Di Toro (table tennis) and Claire McLean (paratriathlon).
Events
Archery
Jonathon Milne earned Australia a spot at the Rio Games following his performance at the 2015 World Archery Para Championships and he was selected to make his debut in the Australian team on 29 July 2016.[16]
Officials - Head Coach/ Team Leader - Ricci Cheah [17]
Athlete | Event | Ranking round | Round of 32 | Round of 16 | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Score | Seed | Opposition score |
Opposition score |
Opposition score |
Opposition score |
Opposition score |
Rank | ||
Jonathon Milne | Individual compound open | 672 | 9 | W 143-136 | W 137-129 | W 139-128 | L 138-139 | W 145-142 |
Milne won Australia first archery medal since 1984 by winning a bronze medal.
Athletics
Australian Paralympic Committee announced a team of 44 athletes on 2 August 2016.[18] An additional two athletes - Tamsin Colley and Jessee Wyatt were added after the Russian suspension.[14] Emily Tapp was selected but forced to withdraw after a burnt leg did not heal in time for the Games.[15]
Men | Women |
---|---|
Sam Carter (d), Aaron Chatman, Jaryd Clifford (d), Gabriel Cole, Richard Colman, Brayden Davidson (d), Guy Henly (d), Todd Hodgetts, Nicholas Hum (d), Kurt Fearnley, Deon Kenzie (d), Jake Lappin, Rheed McCracken, Sam McIntosh, Evan O'Hanlon, Chad Perris (d), Scott Reardon, Michael Roeger, Jayden Sawyer (d), Russell Short, Brad Scott, James Turner (d), Jessee Wyatt (d) | Rae Anderson (d), Angie Ballard, Carlee Beattie, Erin Cleaver (d), Tamsin Colley (d), Brianna Coop (d), Christie Dawes, Madison de Rozario, Taylor Doyle (d), Jodi Elkington-Jones, Louise Ellery, Nicole Harris (d), Madeleine Hogan, Isis Holt (d), Torita Isaac, Claire Keefer (d), Rosemary Little, Brydee Moore, Jemima Moore, Ella Pardy (d), Kath Proudfoot, Sarah Walsh (d) |
(d) Paralympic Games debut
Officials - Administration - Team Leader - Andrew Faichney, Team Managers -Lynda Gusbeth, Amy Hibbert ; Coaches - Iryna Dvoskina, Brett Robinson, Sebastian Kuzminski, Gary Bourne, Phio Saunders, Louise Sauvage, Fred Periac, John Eden, Hamish MacDonald, Breanne Clement, Andrew Dawes; Medical - Team Doctor - Lisa Elkington, Physiotherapists - Victoria Moore, Bernadette Petzel, Cameron Elliott, Soft Tissue Therapists - Phillip Power, Michael Jordan, Carers - Kate McIntosh, Stephen Caddy, Mechanic - Matthew Crawford.[17]
Australia won 26 medals – 3 gold, 9 silver and 14 bronze. Gold medalists were – Brayden Davidson, Scott Reardon and James Turner. Russell Short attended his 8th Games, Christine Dawes her 6th Games and Kurt Fearnley his fifth Games.
Track events - women
Athlete | Events | Heat | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | ||
Angie Ballard | 100 m T53 | 16.80 | 3 Q | 16.59 | |
400 m T53 | 55.26 | 1 Q | 55.28 | ||
800 m T53 | 1:48.74 | 2 Q | 1:47.97 | 4 | |
1500 m T54 | 3:33.05 | 15 | Did not advance | ||
Tamsin Colley | 200 m T36 | 37.80 | 11 | Did not advance | |
Brianna Coop | 100 m T35 | N/A | 15.56 | 4 | |
200 m T35 | N/A | 33.08 | 5 | ||
Christie Dawes | 1500 m T54 | 3:28.57 | 5 Q | 3:26.00 | 8 |
5000 m T54 | 12:15.95 | 11 | Did not advance | ||
Marathon T54 | N/A | 1:42:59 | 7 | ||
Madison de Rozario | 800 m T53 | 1:54.14 | 8 Q | 1:47.64 | |
1500 m T54 | 3:31.54 | 9 Q | 3:24.33 | 5 | |
5000 m T54 | 11:49.71 | 5 Q | 11:54.46 | 4 | |
Isis Holt | 100 m T35 | N/A | 13.75 | ||
200 m T35 | N/A | 28.79 | |||
Torita Isaac | 400 m T38 | N/A | 1:04.47 | 4 | |
Rosemary Little | 100 m T34 | N/A | 19.05 | 5 | |
400 m T34 | N/A | 1:01.91 | 4 | ||
800 m T34 | N/A | 2:04.10 | 4 | ||
Jemima Moore | 100 m T54 | 18.39 | 11 | Did not advance | |
400 m T54 | 1:00.24 | 11 | Did not advance | ||
800 m T54 | 1:54.37 | 10 | Did not advance | ||
Ella Pardy | 100 m T38 | 13.30 | 6 Q | 13.22 | 6 |
Erin Cleaver Jodi Elkington-Jones Isis Holt Ella Pardy |
4 × 100 m T35-38 | N/A | 55.09 | ||
Angie Ballard Christie Dawes Madison de Rozario Jemima Moore Emily Tapp |
4 × 400 m T53-54 | N/A | 3:46.63 | ||
Track events - men
Athlete | Events | Heat | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | ||
Sam Carter | 100 m T54 | 14.59 | 7 Q | 14.46 | 6 |
400 m T54 | 49.24 | 15 | Did not advance | ||
Jaryd Clifford | 1500 m T13 | N/A | 3:56.67 | 7 | |
5000 m T13 | N/A | 15:06.64 | 7 | ||
Gabriel Cole | 100 m T47 | 11.14 | 4 | 11.17 | 7 |
Richard Colman | 400 m T53 | 52.59 | 12 | Did not advance | |
800 m T53 | 1:43.79 | 8 | Did not advance | ||
Kurt Fearnley | 1500 m T54 | 3:05.47 | 4 Q | 3:01.35 | 5 |
5000 m T54 | 10.36.53 | 8 Q | 11:02.37 | ||
Marathon T54 | N/A | 1:26:17 | |||
Deon Kenzie | 1500 m T38 | N/A | 4:14.95 | ||
Jake Lappin | 400 m T54 | 48.88 | 11 | Did not advance | |
800 m T54 | DNS | Did not advance | |||
1500 m T54 | 3:06.73 | 12 | Did not advance | ||
Rheed McCracken | 100 m T34 | 15.50 PR | 2 Q | 15.34 | |
800 m T34 | 1:46.31 | 3 Q | 1:41.25 | ||
Sam McIntosh | 100 m T52 | 17.92 | 4Q | 18.13 | 4 |
400 m T52 | DNS | Did not advance | |||
Evan O'Hanlon | 100 m T38 | 11.25 | 2 Q | 10.98 | |
Chad Perris | 100 m T13 | 10.91 | 3 Q | 10.83 | |
Scott Reardon | 100 m T42 | 12.26 PR | 1 Q | 12.26 PR | |
Michael Roeger | 1500 m T46 | N/A | 4:01.34 | ||
Brad Scott | 1500 m T37 | N/A | 4:25.98 | 6 | |
James Turner | 800 m T36 | N/A | 2:02.39 WR | ||
Field events - women
Athlete | Events | Result | Rank |
---|---|---|---|
Rae Anderson | Shot put F38 | 28.46 | 5 |
Discus F37 | 27.14 | 8 | |
Carlee Beattie | Long jump T47 | 5.57 | |
Erin Cleaver | Long jump T38 | 4.51 | 5 |
Taylor Doyle | Long jump T38 | 4.62 | |
Jodi Elkington-Jones | Long jump T37 | 4.30 | |
Louise Ellery | Shot put F32 | 4.19 | |
Nicole Harris | Shot put F20 | 11.53 | 7 |
Madeleine Hogan | Javelin throw F46 | 39.75 | 5 |
Claire Keefer | Shot put F41 | 8.16 | |
Discus F41 | 23.27 | 7 | |
Brydee Moore | Shot put F33 | 5.08 | 4 |
Kath Proudfoot | Shot Put F36 | 9.70 | |
Sarah Walsh | Long jump T44 | 4.82 | 6 |
Field events - men
Athlete | Events | Result | Rank |
---|---|---|---|
Aaron Chatman | High jump T47 | 1.99 | |
Brayden Davidson | Long jump T36 | 5.62 PR | |
Guy Henly | Discus F37 | 51.97 | 4 |
Todd Hodgetts | Shot put F20 | 15.82 | |
Nicholas Hum | Long jump T20 | 6.89 | 5 |
Jayden Sawyer | Javelin F38 | 45.63 | 5 |
Russell Short | Shot put F12 | 15.01 | 7 |
Jessee Wyatt | Shot put F33 | 8.71 | 4 |
Legend: Q= Qualified for final; OC= Oceania Record; PR= Paralympic Record; WR= World Record
Boccia
Australia selected Daniel Michel and his ramp assistant Ashlee McClure for their debut Games. Michel is the first player since the 2000 Sydney Paralympics
[19]
Officials - Head Coach - Ken Halliday ; Ramp assistant - Ashlee McClure.[17]
Athlete | Event | Seeding matches | Round of 32 | Round of 16 | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Final / BM | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | ||
Daniel Michel | Mixed individual BC3 | W 3-2 |
L 2-7 |
Did not advance |
Cycling
The cycling team was announced on 30 May 2016. The team consisted of 13 athletes and three sighted pilots:[20] For Modra, this would be his eighth Paralympic Games.[20] Michael Gallagher was originally selected but on 2 September 2016 he was withdrawn from the team due to a positive doping test sample.[21]
Men | Women |
---|---|
Kieran Modra, David Nicholas, Stuart Tripp, Kyle Bridgwood (d), Alistair Donohoe (d), Matthew Formston (d), David Edwards (d) (for pilot Kieran Modra), Nick Yallouris (d) (for pilot Matthew Formston) | Jessica Gallagher, Carol Cooke, Simone Kennedy, Alexandra Lisney, Sue Powell, Amanda Reid, Madison Janssen (d) (pilot for Jessica Gallagher) |
Officials - Administration: Team Leader - Murray Lydeamore, Assistant Team Leader - Berthy May ; Coaches - Peter Day (Head), Thomas Skulander, Nick Formosa, Jason Niblett ; Other - Physiotherapist - Eliza Kwan, Mechanics - Michael Winter, Will Dickeson[17] (d) Paralympic Games debut
- Track Events — Women
Athlete | Event | Qualification | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Opposition Time |
Rank | ||
Jessica Gallagher (Madison Janssen - pilot) |
Women's's individual pursuit B | 3:45.744 | 9 | Did not advance | |
Women's 1km time trial B | N/A | 1:08.171 | |||
Simone Kennedy | Women's individual pursuit C1-3 | 4:33.815 | 8 | Did not advance | |
Women's 500 m time trial C1-3 | N/A | 44.961 | 9 | ||
Alexandra Lisney | Women's individual pursuit C4 | 4:11.087 | 6 | Did not advance | |
Women's 500 m time trial C4-5 | N/A | 40.823 | 12 | ||
Susan Powell | Women's individual pursuit C4 | 4:01.964 | 2 Q | 4:04.794 | |
Women's 500 m time trial C4-5 | N/A | 38.979 | 8 | ||
Amanda Reid | Women's 500 m time trial C1-3 | N/A | 37.581 | ||
- Track Events — Men
Athlete | Event | Qualification | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Opposition Time |
Rank | ||
Kyle Bridgwood | Men's individual pursuit C4 | 4:38.639 | 2 Q | 2:19.920 Overlapped |
|
Alistair Donohoe | Men's individual pursuit C5 | 4:38.050 | 2 Q | 4:44.520 | |
Matthew Formston (Nick Yallouris - pilot) |
Men's individual pursuit B | 4:14.258 | 5 | Did not advance | |
Men's 1 km time trial B | N/A | 1:02.546 | 6 | ||
Kieran Modra (David Edwards - pilot) |
Men's individual pursuit B | 4:14.339 | 6 | Did not advance | |
David Nicholas | Men's individual pursuit C3 | 3:32.336 PR | 1 Q | 3:33.028 | |
- Track Events — Mixed
Athlete | Event | Qualification | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Opposition Time |
Rank | ||
Alistair Donohoe David Nicholas Susan Powell Amanda Reid |
Mixed team sprint | 55.308 | 6 | Did not advance | |
- Road Events — Women
Athlete | Event | Time | Rank |
---|---|---|---|
Carol Cooke | Women's road time trial T1-2 | 26:11.40 | |
Women's road race T1-2 | 1:07:51 | ||
Simone Kennedy | Women's road time trial C1-3 | 34:31.32 | 10 |
Women's road race C1-3 | 1:30:49 | 8 | |
Alexandra Lisney | Women's road time trial C4 | 30:28.39 | 4 |
Women's road race C4-5 | 2:22:56 | 7 | |
Susan Powell | Women's road time trial C4 | 30:19.29 | |
Women's road race C4-5 | 2:25:50 | 9 | |
Amanda Reid | Women's road time trial C1-3 | 35:55.81 | 11 |
Women's road race C1-3 | 1:39:12 | 11 | |
- Road Events — Men
Athlete | Event | Time | Rank |
---|---|---|---|
Kyle Bridgwood | Men's road time trial C4 | 38:23.21 | |
Men's road race C4-5 | 2:15:41 | 6 | |
Alistair Donohoe | Men's road time trial C4 | 37:33.36 | |
Men's road race C4-5 | 2:14:03 | 5 | |
Matthew Formston (Nick Yallouris - pilot) |
Men's road time trial B | 36:55.25 | 13 |
Men's road race B | 2:41:48 | 13 | |
Kieran Modra (David Edwards - pilot) |
Men's road time trial B | 35:09.06 | |
Men's road race B | 2:27:15 | 5 | |
David Nicholas | Men's road time trial C3 | 40:15.96 | 4 |
Men's road race C1-3 | 1:51:48 | 5 | |
Stuart Tripp | Men's road time trial H5 | 28:36.81 | |
Men's road race H5 | 1:37:51 | 7 | |
Equestrian
On 28 June 2014, four riders were selected.[22]
Women - Emma Booth (d), Sharon Jarvis, Lisa Martin (d), Katie Umback (d)
Officials - Team Leader - Sally Francis ; Head Coach - Julia Battams ; Physiotherapist - Victoria Kahn ; Veterinarian - Denis Goulding ; Grooms - Shahira Ameen, Emma Bardot, Sam Moran, Maddison McAndrew ; Carer - Raelene Booth[17]
(d) Paralympic Games debut
- Individual competition
Athlete | Horse | Event | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Score | Rank | |||
Emma Booth | Zidane | Individual championship test grade II | 69.914 | 5 |
Dressage individual team test grade II | 65.765 | 13 | ||
Sharon Jarvis | Maquis | Individual championship test grade III | 68.537 | 9 |
Dressage individual team test grade III | 65.921 | 15 | ||
Lisa Martin | Ceasy | Individual championship test grade IV | 72.310 | 4 |
Dressage individual team test grade IV | 71.476 | 4 | ||
Individual Freestyle Test - Grade IV | 72.250 | 4 | ||
Katie Umback | First Famous | Individual championship test grade III | 67.902 | 12 |
Dressage individual team test grade III | 68.000 | 8 |
- Team competition
Athlete | Horse | Event | Individual score | Total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
TT | CT | Total | Score | Rank | |||
from Emma Booth |
See above | Team | 65.765 | 69.914 | 135.679 | 415.367 | 9 |
Sharon Jarvis | 65.921 | 68.537 | 134.458 | ||||
Lisa Martin | 72.310 | 71.476 | 143.786 | ||||
Katie Umback | 68.000 | 67.902 | 135.902 | ||||
Goalball
The Australian women's team (Belles) originally failed to qualify after finishing third at the IBSA Goalball Asia Pacific Championships in Hangzhou, China.[23] Australian men's team failed to qualify after finishing fifth at the IBSA Goalball Asia Pacific Championships in Hangzhou, China.[24] Following the re-allocation of Russia's spot, Australia's women found themselves getting a last minute invite to Rio. Australia's women enter the tournament ranked ninth in the world.[25]
Officials - Team Leader - Robert Vogt ; Coach - Peter Corr[17]
The following is the Australia roster in the women's goalball tournament of the 2016 Summer Paralympics.[26]
No. | Player | Class | Date of birth (age) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Jennifer Blow | B3 | 10 April 1991 (aged 25) |
2 | Tyan Taylor | B3 | 23 March 1990 (aged 26) |
3 | Nicole Esdaile | B3 | 1 June 1987 (aged 29) |
6 | Michelle Rzepecki | B3 | 6 November 1986 (aged 29) |
7 | Raissa Martin | B3 | 3 March 1991 (aged 25) |
8 | Meica Horsburgh | B3 | 24 February 1989 (aged 27) |
Pos | Team | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts | Qualification |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 37 | 11 | +26 | 12 | Quarter-finals | |
2 | 4 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 21 | 14 | +7 | 9 | ||
3 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 16 | 22 | −6 | 6 | ||
4 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 9 | 17 | −8 | 1 | ||
5 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 6 | 25 | −19 | 1 |
8 September 2016 18:45 |
Australia |
2–5 | Future Arena, Rio de Janeiro Referees: Vilma Basinkaite (LTU), Yoshinori Nii (JPN) | |
Horsburgh 1 Esdaile 1 |
Report | Zhang W. 4 Chen 1 | ||
10 September 2016 10:15 |
Ukraine |
2–2 | Future Arena, Rio de Janeiro Referees: Bülent Kimyon (TUR), Daniel Voltan (BRA) | |
Rud 2 | Report | Horsburgh 1 Esdaile 1 | ||
11 September 2016 18:45 |
Australia |
2–12 | Future Arena, Rio de Janeiro Referees: Joelle Boulet (CAN), Raili Sipura (FIN) | |
Horsburgh 2 | Report | Özcan 5 Mercan 5 Yıldız 1 Altınoluk 1 | ||
13 September 2016 15:30 |
Canada |
6–0 | Future Arena, Rio de Janeiro Referees: Daniel Voltan (BRA), Raili Sipura (FIN) | |
Burk 6 | Report | |||
Paracanoeing
On 16 June 2016, six athletes were selected to compete in the new Paralympic Games sport of paracanoe.[27]
Athlete | Event | Heats | Semi-Final | Final | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | ||
Colin Sieders (d) | Men's KL1 | 59.732 | 8 | 57.176 | 4 FA | 55.437 | 8 |
Curtis McGrath (d) | Men's KL2 | 44.104 | 1 FA | N/A | 42.190 PR | ||
Dylan Littlehales (d) | Men's KL3 | 46.305 | 8 | 45.258 | 6 | Did not advance | |
Jocelyn Neumueller (d) | Women's KL1 | 1:03.658 | 4 | 1:03.666 | 2 FA | 1:03.361 | 5 |
Susan Seipel (d) | Women's KL2 | 58.314 | 3 FA | N/A | 56.796 | ||
Amanda Reynolds (d) | Women's KL3 | 53.412 | 1 FA | N/A | 51.378 |
Officials - Team Leader - Christine Bain ; Coaches - Andrea King (Head), Guy Power ; Physiotherapist - Melissa Nolan[17]
(d) Paralympic Games debut
Paratriathlon
Australian Paralympic Committee announced a team of seven athletes on 3 August 2016.[28] Paratriathlon makes its debut at the Rio Games.
Men | Women |
---|---|
Nic Beveridge (d), Bill Chaffey (d), Brant Garvey (d) | Kate Doughty (d), Katie Kelly (d), Michellie Jones (guide) for Kelly (d), Claire McLean |
Officials - Team Leader - Kathryn Periac ; Assistant Team Leader/Coach - Craig Redman ; Coaches - Corey Bacon, Shaun D’Auria ; Michael Brice - Mechanic/ Handler ; Handler - Darren Tattersall[17]
(d) Paralympic Games debut
- Women's Events
Athlete | Event | Swim | Trans 1 | Bike | Trans 2 | Run | Total Time | Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kate Doughty | Women's PT4 | 11:42 | 1:18 | 28.09 | 0:53 | 23.48 | 1:15:50 | 5 |
Claire McLean | Women's PT4 | 15:09 | 1:35 | 37.12 | 1:09 | 24:41 | 1:19:46 | 9 |
Katie Kelly Michellie Jones (guide) |
Women's PT5 | 16:09 | 1:24 | 33:15 | 0:53 | 10:37 | 1:12:18 | |
- Men's Events
Athlete | Event | Swim | Trans 1 | Bike | Trans 2 | Run | Total Time | Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bill Chaffey | Men's PT1 | 11:21 | 1:27 | 37.17 | 0.48 | 12.08 | 1:03:01 | 4 |
Nic Beveridge | Men's PT1 | 11:57 | 1:43 | 42:55 | 1:00 | 13:00 | 1:10:35 | 9 |
Brant Garvey | Men's PT2 | 10:45 | 1:36 | 40:40 | 1:56 | 24:24 | 1:19:21 | 10 |
Rowing
On 11 July 2016, Australian Paralympic Committee announced a team of 8 athletes. Australia will have a boat in the Legs, Trunk and Arms Mixed Coxed Four for the first time.[29]
Men | Women |
---|---|
Gavin Bellis, Erik Horrie, Brock Ingram (d), Jeremy McGrath (d) | Josephine Burnand (d) (cox), Davinia Lefroy (d), Kathleen Murdoch (d), Kathryn Ross |
Officials - Coaches - Gordon Marcks, Tara Huntly, Jason Baker; Team Leader - Dean Oakman; Boatman - Chris O'Brien[17]
(d) Paralympic Games debut
Athlete(s) | Event | Heats | Repechage | Final | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | ||
Erik Horrie | Men's single sculls | 4:45.87 | 1 Q | Bye | 4:42.94 | ||
Gavin Bellis Kathryn Ross |
Mixed double sculls | 4:03.25 | 4 | 4:08.57 | 3 FB | 4:05.61 | 2 |
Brock Ingram Jeremy McGrath Davinia Lefroy Kathleen Murdoch Jo Burnand (cox) |
Mixed coxed four | 3:32.88 | 3:37.29 | 3 FB | 3:30.59 | 1 |
Qualification Legend: FA=Final A (medal); FB=Final B (non-medal); R=Repechage
Sailing
Selected team of 6 athletes - Matthew Bugg (Single person 2.4mR), Daniel Fitzgibbon and Liesl Tesch (Two person Skud 18), Colin Harrison, Russell Boaden, Jonathan Harris (Three person Sonar). This will be the last Games for sailing has been taken off the 2020 Tokyo Games program.[30]
Athlete | Event | Race | Net points | Rank | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | ||||
Matthew Bugg | Single person 2.4mR | 3 | 5 | 3 | 1 | 5 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 14 | 1 | 36 | ||
Daniel Fitzgibbon, Liesl Tesch | SKUD 18 – 2 person keelboat | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 12 | ||
Colin Harrison, Russell Boaden, Jonathan Harris | Sonar – 3 person keelboat | 1 | 2 | 5 | 7 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 26 |
Officials - Team Leader - Mark Robinson, Assistant Team Leader - Shellee Ferguson ; Coaches - Grant Alderson, Geoff Woolley, Richard Scarr ; ; Boatmen - Andrew Lechte, Tim Lowe, Physiotherapist - Sarah Ross, Carer - Ryoko Yamaguchi.[17]
Shooting
Shooting Australia nominated six athletes in May 2016.[31] Libby Kosmala was selected for her twelfth Games. The team was missing Paralympian Ashley Adams who was killed in 2015 accident.[31]
Men | Women |
---|---|
Luke Cain, Bradley Mark, Chris Pitt (d), Anton Zappelli (d) |
Libby Kosmala, Natalie Smith |
Officials - Head Coach - Miro Sipek, Team Leader - Tim Mahon, Assistant Coach - Margaret Bugden, Carers - Yvonne Cain, Stuart Smith, Maragret Zubcic [32]
(d) Paralympic Games debut
Athlete | Event | Qualification | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Score | Rank | Score | Rank | ||
Luke Cain | Mixed 10 m air rifle standing SH2 | 619.9 | 26 | Did not advance | |
Mixed 10 m air rifle prone SH2 | 623.0 | 33 | Did not advance | ||
Libby Kosmala | Women's 10 m air rifle standing SH1 | 396.0 | 18 | Did not advance | |
Mixed R3-10 m air rifle prone SH1 | 622.0 | 37 | Did not advance | ||
Bradley Mark | Mixed 10 m air rifle standing SH2 | 627.2 | 12 | Did not advance | |
Mixed 10 m air rifle prone SH2 | 627.3 | 9 | Did not advance | ||
Christopher Pitt | Men's 10 metre air pistol SH1 | 557-12x | 14 | Did not advance | |
Mixed 25 metre pistol SH1 | 566-15x | 7 | 8 pts - 4 | 3pts - 4 | |
Natalie Smith | Women's 10 m air rifle standing SH1 | 406.1 | 7 Q | 142.5 | 5 |
Mixed R3-10 m air rifle prone SH1 | 626.4 | 31 | Did not advance | ||
Women's 50 metre rifle 3 positions SH1 | 558-10x | 8 Q | 389.5 | 8 | |
Mixed 50 metre rifle prone SH1 | 608.8 | 24 | Did not advance | ||
Anton Zappelli | Mixed 10 metre air rifle prone SH1 | 629.9 | 18 | Did not advance | |
Mixed 50 metre rifle prone SH1 | 598.3 | 36 | Did not advance | ||
Australia did not win any medals. Australia's best placing was Christopher Pitt's fourth.
Swimming
36 athletes were selected on 1 August 2016.[33] Three athletes were selected for their fourth Games - Matthew Levy, Jeremy McClure and Rick Pendleton[33] 22 athletes were selected for their debut Paralympics with two 14-year olds Tiffany Thomas-Kane and Katja Dedekind being selected.[33]
Men | Women |
---|---|
Joshua Alford (d), Michael Anderson, Jesse Aungles (d), Liam Bekric (d), Blake Cochrane, Rowan Crothers (d), Timothy Disken (d), Daniel Fox, Matthew Haanappel, Brenden Hall, Guy Harrison-Murray (d), Timothy Hodge (d), Braedan Jason (d), Ahmed Kelly, Matthew Levy, Jeremy McClure, Rick Pendleton, Logan Powell (d), Sean Russo, Liam Schulter (d), Jacob Templeton (d) | Emily Beecroft (d), Ellie Cole, Katja Dedekind (d), Maddison Elliott, Tanya Huebner (d), Jenna Jones (d), Paige Leonhardt (d), Ashleigh McConnell (d), Monique Murphy (d), Lakeisha Patterson (d), Madeleine Scott (d), Tiffany Thomas Kane (d), Rachael Watson (d), Prue Watt, Kate Wilson (d) |
Officials - Team Leader - Adam Pine ; Coaches -Head Coach - Brendan Keogh ; Coaches - Angelo Basalo, Jan Cameron, Harley Connolly, Nathan Doyle, Lachlan Falvey, Rick Van Der Zant, Yuriy Vdovychenko ; Assistant Team Leaders - Michelle Doyle, Ian Armbruster, Sports science - Brendan Burkett, Biomechanist - Danielele Formosa, Team Doctor - Caron Jander, Physiotherapists - David Spurrier, Brett Doring, Soft Tissue Therapists - Jacqui Gilbert, Samantha Short, Psychologist - Thomas Tapper (Psychologist), Carer - Jeanette Phillips-Hughes
[17]
Australian won 29 medals including 10 gold. Maddison Elliott won three gold and Lakeisha Patterson and Ellie Cole won two gold.
(d) Paralympic Games debut
Men's events
Athlete | Events | Heats | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | ||
Joshua Alford | 200 m freestyle S14 | 2:01.36 | 9 | Did not advance | |
100 m backstroke S14 | 1:06.69 | 8 Q | 1:07.77 | 8 | |
200 m individual medley SM14 | 2:22.99 | 16 | Did not advance | ||
Michael Anderson | 50 m freestyle S10 | 26.31 | 15 | Did not advance | |
100 m freestyle S10 | 57.45 | 15 | Did not advance | ||
100 m backstroke S10 | 1:01.02 | 4 Q | 1:01.37 | 6 | |
Jesse Aungles | 400 m freestyle S8 | 4:43.87 | 8 Q | 4:48.23 | 8 |
100 m butterfly S8 | 1:05.37 | 7 Q | 1:06.60 | 7 | |
100 m backstroke S8 | 1:10.39 | 7 Q | 1:09.47 | 7 | |
200 m individual medley SM7 | 2:31.62 | 5 Q | 2:28.96 | 6 | |
Liam Bekric | 400 m freestyle S13 | 4:43.32 | 12 | Did not advance | |
100 m breaststroke SB13 | 1:09.17 | 4 Q | 1:08.70 | 4 | |
100 m backstroke S13 | 1:07.47 | 9 | Did not advance | ||
200 m individual medley SM13 | 2:24.11 | 14 | Did not advance | ||
Blake Cochrane | 50 m freestyle S8 | 28.19 | 10 | Did not advance | |
100 m freestyle S8 | 1:02.12 | 10 | Did not advance | ||
400 m freestyle S8 | 4:41.06 | 4 Q | 4:39.79 | 7 | |
100 m breaststroke SB7 | 1:20.08 | 2 Q | 1:18.66 | ||
Rowan Crothers | 50 m freestyle S10 | 24.49 | 6 Q | 24.09 | 6 |
100 m freestyle S10 | 52.98 | 4 Q | 52.17 | 5 | |
400 m freestyle S10 | 4:13.72 | 8 Q | 4:10.83 | 6 | |
Timothy Disken | 50 m freestyle S9 | 26.08 | 2 Q | 25.99 | |
100 m freestyle S9 | 56.73 | 1 Q | 56.23 | ||
200 m individual medley SM9 | 2:18.86 | 1 Q | 2:17.72 | ||
Daniel Fox | 200 m freestyle S14 | 1:57.19 | 1 Q PR | 1:56.69 | |
100 m backstroke S14 | 1:03.35 | 3 Q | 1:05.16 | 6 | |
200 m individual medley SM14 | 2:21.55 | 12 | Did not advance | ||
Matthew Haanappel | 50 m freestyle S6 | 31.47 | 6 Q | 30.77 | 5 |
100 m freestyle S6 | 1:09.96 | 8 Q | 1:09.24 | 6 | |
400 m freestyle S6 | 5:36.09 | 7 Q | 5:28.95 | 6 | |
100 m backstroke S6 | 1:23.76 | 9 | Did not advance | ||
Brenden Hall | 50 m freestyle S9 | 27.05 | 12 | Did not advance | |
100 m freestyle S9 | 57.14 | 2 Q | 56.95 | ||
400 m freestyle S9 | 4:20.46 | 1 Q | 4:12.73 | ||
100 m backstroke S9 | 1:05.56 | 5 Q | 1:04.67 | ||
100 m butterfly S9 | 1:02.11 | 6 Q' | 1:01.85 | 4 | |
200 m individual medley SM9 | 2:21.74 | 5 Q | DSQ | ||
Guy Harrison-Murray | 50 m freestyle S10 | 25.08 | 8 Q | 24.47 | 7 |
100 m freestyle S10 | 54.78 | 9 | Did not advance | ||
400 m freestyle S10 | 4:11.54 | 5 Q | 4:11.18 | 8 | |
Timothy Hodge | 50 m freestyle S9 | 27.55 | 14 | Did not advance | |
100 m freestyle S9 | 58.85 | 14 | Did not advance | ||
400 m freestyle S9 | 4:29.53 | 9 | Did not advance | ||
100 m backstroke S9 | 1:05.99 | 6 Q | 1:05.18 | 6 | |
100 m butterfly S9 | 1:05.21 | 10 | Did not advance | ||
200 m individual medley SM9 | 2:22.23 | 6 Q | 2:21.14 | 5 | |
Braedan Jason | 50 m freestyle S13 | 24.75 | 5 Q | 24.61 | 6 |
100 m freestyle S13 | 53.90 | 8 Q | 54.04 | 7 | |
400 m freestyle S10 | 4:15.59 | 5 Q | 4:12.95 | 5 | |
100 m butterfly S13 | 59.77 | 7 Q | 1:00.12 | 7 | |
Ahmed Kelly | 50 m breaststroke SB3 | 51.91 | 5 Q | 51.90 | 7 |
50 m backstroke S4 | 59.55 | 11 | Did not advance | ||
150 m individual medley SM4 | 3:07.81 | 9 | Did not advance | ||
Matthew Levy | 50 m freestyle S7 | 28.55 | 1 Q | 28.68 | 4 |
100 m freestyle S7 | 1:04.90 | 4 Q | 1:02.28 | 4 | |
50 m butterfly S7 | 31.35 | 4 Q | 31.32 | 5 | |
200 m individual medley SM7 | 2:46.04 | 4 Q | 2:36.99 | ||
Jeremy McClure | 50 m freestyle S11 | 29.61 | 14 | Did not advance | |
100 m freestyle S11 | 1:06.72 | 12 | Did not advance | ||
100 m backstroke S11 | 1:09.79 | 2 Q | 1:09.11 | 5 | |
Rick Pendleton | 100 m butterfly S10 | 1:01.50 | 10 | Did not advance | |
100 m breaststroke SB9 | 1:09.38 | 6 Q | 1:08.27 | 5 | |
Logan Powell | 100 m butterfly S9 | 1:06.66 | 13 | Did not advance | |
100 m backstroke S9 | 1:06.37 | 8 Q | 1:06.13 | 8 | |
400 m freestyle S9 | 4:28.94 | 8 Q | 4:27.22 | 7 | |
Sean Russo | 50 m freestyle S13 | 26.19 | 15 | Did not advance | |
100 m freestyle S13 | 56.39 | 16 | Did not advance | ||
100 m backstroke S13 | 1:02.19 | 6 Q | 1:01.43 | 5 | |
100 m butterfly S13 | 1:02.18 | 12 | Did not advance | ||
100 m breaststroke SB13 | 1:14.32 | 8 Q | 1:13.85 | 7 | |
200 m individual medley SM14 | 2:16.37 | 6 Q | 2:16.29 | 6 | |
Liam Schulter | 100 m backstroke S14 | 1:07.64 | 12 | Did not advance | |
100 m breaststroke SB14 | 1:16.56 | 15 | Did not advance | ||
200 m freestyle S14 | 1:58.95 | 4 Q' | 1:59.38 | 5 | |
200 m individual medley SM14 | 2:18.59 | 6 Q | 2:18.85 | 7 | |
Jacob Templeton | 50 m freestyle S13 | 25.75 | 10 | Did not advance | |
100 m freestyle S13 | 55.92 | 13 | Did not advance | ||
400 m freestyle S13 | 4:19.11 | 7 Q | 4:15.86 | 6 | |
100 m butterfly S13 | 1:01.04 | 11 | Did not advance | ||
200 m individual medley SM13 | 2:18.72 | 8 Q | 2:20.90 | 8 | |
Timothy Disken Matthew Levy Blake Cochrane Rowan Crothers |
4x100 m freestyle relay 34 pts | N/A | 3:51.96 | 5 | |
Timothy Hodge Rick Pendleton Brenden Hall Matthew Levy |
4x100 m medley relay 34 pts | N/A | 4:18.08 | 4 |
Women's events
Athlete | Events | Heats | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | ||
Emily Beecroft | 50 m freestyle S9 | 29.61 | 5 Q | 29.33 | 4 |
100 m freestyle S9 | 1:04.90 | 7 Q | 1:05.19 | 6 | |
100 m butterfly S9 | 1:10.97 | 8 Q | 1:10.56 | 6 | |
200 m individual medley SM9 | 2:45.91 | 15 | Did not advance | ||
Ellie Cole | 50 m freestyle S9 | 29.26 | 2 Q | 29.13 | |
100 m freestyle S9 | 1:03.40 | 3 Q | 1:02.93 | ||
400 m freestyle S9 | 4:50.19 | 1 Q | 4:42.58 | ||
100 m backstroke S9 | 1:11.22 | 2 Q | 1:09.18 PR | ||
Katja Dedekind | 50 m freestyle S13 | 28.97 | 11 | Did not advance | |
100 m freestyle S13 | 1:04.59 | 14 | Did not advance | ||
400 m freestyle S13 | 4:52.23 | 6 Q | 4:50.43 | 7 | |
100 m backstroke S13 | 1:14.61 | 4 Q | 1:12.25 | ||
Maddison Elliott | 50 m freestyle S8 | 30.83 | 2 Q | 29.73 WR | |
100 m freestyle S8 | 1:07.69 | 3 Q | 1:04.73 PR | ||
400 m freestyle S8 | 5:09.85 | 4 Q | 5:02.13 | 4 | |
100 m backstroke S8 | 1:20.79 | 6 Q | 1:17.16 | ||
100 m butterfly S8 | 1:16.18 | 4 Q | 1:13.80 | 6 | |
200 m individual medley SM8 | 2:52.42 | 4 Q | 2:49.67 | 6 | |
Tanya Huebner | 50 m butterfly S6 | 42.80 | 9 | Did not advance | |
100 m breaststroke SB6 | 1:42.66 | 4 Q | 1:40.54 | 5 | |
Jenna Jones | 50 m freestyle S13 | 28.57 | 5 Q | 28.77 | 7 |
100 m freestyle S13 | 1:02.75 | 9 | Did not advance | ||
100 m backstroke S13 | 1:15.62 | 7 Q | 1:15.14 | 7 | |
100 m breaststroke SB13 | 1:22.25 | 10 | Did not advance | ||
200 m individual medley SM13 | 2:41.55 | 12 | Did not advance | ||
Paige Leonhardt | 50 m freestyle S10 | 30.00 | 13 | Did not advance | |
100 m freestyle S10 | 1:07.24 | 16 | Did not advance | ||
100 m breaststroke SB9 | 1:21.67 | 6 Q | 1:20.44 | 6 | |
100 m backstroke S10 | 1:16.11 | 14 | Did not advance | ||
100 m butterfly S10 | 1:11.42 | 6 Q | 1:10.55 | 6 | |
200 m individual medley SM10 | 2:39.57 | 9 | Did not advance | ||
Ashleigh McConnell | 50 m freestyle S9 | 29.61 | 5 Q | 29.63 | 7 |
100 m freestyle S9 | 1:04.78 | 6 Q | 1:05.19 | 6 | |
400 m freestyle S9 | 5:16.28 | 15 | Did not advance | ||
Monique Murphy | 50 m freestyle S10 | 29.81 | 12 | Did not advance | |
100 m freestyle S10 | 1:04.16 | 10 | Did not advance | ||
400 m freestyle S10 | 4:46.58 | 5 Q | 4:35.09 | ||
100 m backstroke S10 | 1:13.62 | 11 | Did not advance | ||
Lakeisha Patterson | 50 m freestyle S8 | 30.97 | 4 Q | 30.13 | |
100 m freestyle S8 | 1:07.45 | 2 Q | 1:05.08 | ||
400 m freestyle S8 | 4:57.37 | 2 Q | 4:40.33 PR WR | ||
100 m backstroke S8 | 1:20.32 | 5 Q | 1:18.27 | 4 | |
100 m butterfly S8 | 1:19.96 | 8 Q | 1:18.99 | 8 | |
200 m individual medley SM8 | 2:50.16 | 3 Q | 2:45.22 | ||
Madeleine Scott | 100 m butterfly S9 | 1:10.96 | 7 Q | 1:10.85 | 7 |
100 m breaststroke SB9 | 1:19.51 | 3 Q | 1:17.93 | 4 | |
200 m individual medley SM9 | 2:38.04 | 4 Q | 2:37.65 | 6 | |
Tiffany Thomas Kane | 50 m freestyle S6 | 35.27 | 4 Q | 34.41 | |
100 m freestyle S6 | 1:17.75 | 5 Q | 1:17.56 | 6 | |
100 m breaststroke SB6 | 1:35.43 PR | 1 Q | 1:35.39 | ||
100 m backstroke S6 | 1:31.58 | 4 Q | DSQ | - | |
50 m butterfly S6 | 37.81 | 3 Q | 36.81 | ||
200 m individual medley SM6 | 3:10.48 | 4 Q | 3:09.78 | ||
Rachael Watson | 50 m freestyle S4 | 40.69 | 2 Q | 40.13 PR | |
50 m breaststroke SB3 | 1:08.19 | 7 | Did not advance | ||
150 m individual medley SM4 | 3:38.66 | 12 | Did not advance | ||
Prue Watt | 50 m freestyle S13 | 28.95 | 10 | Did not advance | |
100 m freestyle S13 | 1:04.29 | 13 | Did not advance | ||
100 m butterfly S13 | 1:09.80 | 1:09.80 | Did not advance | ||
100 m breaststroke SB13 | 1:20.44 | 5 Q | 1:18.16 | 6 | |
200 m individual medley SM13 | 2:40.48 | 8 Q | 2:39.06 | 8 | |
Kate Wilson | 50 m freestyle S6 | 39.81 | 18 | Did not advance | |
100 m freestyle S6 | 1:27.02 | 14 | Did not advance | ||
100 m breaststroke SB6 | 1:49.21 | 8 Q | 1:46.87 | 8 | |
200 m individual medley SM6 | 3:29.20 | 12 | Did not advance | ||
Ellie Cole Maddison Elliott Lakeisha Patterson Ashleigh McConnell |
4x100 m freestyle relay 34 points | 4:16.65 WR | |||
Ellie Cole Madeleine Scott Maddison Elliott Lakeisha Patterson |
4x100 m medley relay 34 points | 4:45.85 |
Mixed events
Athlete | Events | Heats | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | ||
Rachael Watson Tiffany Thomas Kane Ahmed Kelly Matthew Haanappel |
Mixed 4 x 50 metre freestyle 20 points | 2:46.43 | 7 Q | 2:39.92 | 7 |
Legend: Q= Qualified for final; OC= Oceania Record; PR= Paralympic Record; WR= World Record
Table tennis
Five athletes were selected to represent Australia. Daniela Di Toro previously represented Australia in wheelchair tennis and Melissa Tapper was set to become the first Australian to compete at both the Summer Paralympics and Summer Olympics in the same year.[34]
Men | Women |
---|---|
Barak Mizrachi (d), Samuel Von Einem (d) | Daniela Di Toro, Melissa Tapper, Andrea McDonnell (d) |
Officials - Head Coach - Alois Rosario ; Team Leader - Roger Massie
[17]
Samuel Von Einem in winning the silver medal won Australia's first medal since Terry Biggs won gold in 1984.
(d)= Paralympic Games debut
- Men's tournament
Athlete | Event | Preliminaries | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Gold medal match | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Rank | ||
Barak Mizrachi | Singles class 8 | L 0-3 (2-11, 2-11, 4-11) |
L 0-3 (10-12, 5-11, 6-11) |
Did not advance | ||||
Samuel Von Einem | Singles class 11 | N/A | W 3–1 (14-12, 6-11, 11-7, 11-9) |
W 3–2 (12-14, 1-11, 11-2, 11-9, 11-9) |
W 3–2 (8-11, 11-8, 11-6, 7-11, 11-8) |
L 2-3 (8-11, 18-16, 13-11, 5-11, 8-11) |
- Women's tournament
Athlete | Event | Preliminaries | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Bronze medal match | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Rank | ||
Daniela Di Toro | Singles class 4 | L0-3 (2-11, 5-11, 5-11) |
L0-3 (2-11, 3-11, 3-11) |
Did not advance | ||||
Andrea McDonnell | Singles class 10 | L 0-3 (3-11, 5-11, 2-11) |
L 1-3 (8-11, 3-11, 11-4, 7-11) |
L 1-3 (7-11, 3-11, 2-11) |
Did not advance | |||
Melissa Tapper | Singles class 10 | W3–1 (11-2, 11-4, 10-12, 11-9) |
L0-3 (6-11, 3-11, 4-11) |
L2-3 (11-5, 11-5, 8-11, 10-12, 8-11) |
Did not advance | |||
Andrea McDonnell Melissa Tapper |
Team class 6–10 | N/A | Umran Ertis (TUR) W 2-0 (3-2, 3-1) |
Guiyan Xiong (CHN) L 0-2 (1-3, 0-3) |
Danielle Rauen (BRA) L 0-2 (2-3, 0-3) |
4 |
Wheelchair basketball
Men's tournament
The Rollers qualified by winning the 2015 Asia Oceania Qualifying Tournament.[35] On 19 July 2016, the APC announced a team of twelve players with five of them making their Paralympic debut.[36] During the draw, Brazil had the choice of which group they wanted to be in. They were partnered with Spain, who would be in the group Brazil did not select. Brazil chose Group B, which included Iran, the United States, Great Britain, Germany and Algeria. That left Spain in Group A with Australia, Canada, Turkey, the Netherlands and Japan.[37]
- Team roster
Josh Allison (d), Jannik Blair, Adam Deans (d), Tristan Knowles, Bill Latham, Matthew McShane (d), Brad Ness, Shaun Norris, Tom O'Neill-Thorne (d), Shawn Russell (d), Tige Simmons, Brett Stibners
Officials - Coaches - Ben Ettridge (Head Coach), Luke Brennan (Assistant), Tom Kyle (Assistant Coach), Jeremy Synot (Video Coach) ; Program Manager - Leigh Gooding ; Health Coordinator & Team Physiotherapist - - Jesse Adams[17]
(d) Paralympic Games debut
- Group play standings
Pos | Team | Pld | W | L | PF | PA | PD | Pts | Qualification |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 341 | 265 | +76 | 9[lower-alpha 1] | Quarter-finals | |
2 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 327 | 272 | +55 | 9[lower-alpha 1] | ||
3 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 342 | 293 | +49 | 9[lower-alpha 1] | ||
4 | 5 | 2 | 3 | 264 | 294 | −30 | 7 | ||
5 | 5 | 1 | 4 | 278 | 300 | −22 | 6 | 9th/10th place playoff | |
6 | 5 | 0 | 5 | 222 | 350 | −128 | 5 | 11th/12th place playoff |
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Head-to-head results; 3) Points difference; 4) Points scored.
Notes:
- Head-to-head record: Spain 3 pts, +8 PD; Turkey 3 pts, +1 PD; Japan 3 pts, −9 PD
8 September 2016 18:00 |
Netherlands |
50–70 | |
Scoring by quarter: 6–16, 19–21, 13–18, 12–15 | ||
Pts: Korkmaz 24 Rebs: Poggenwisch 9 Asts: Korkmaz, Poggenwish 8 |
Pts: Blair 23 Rebs: Knowles 12 Asts: Stibners 7 |
Rio Olympic Arena, Rio de Janeiro Referees: Bill Kuerzi |
9 September 2016 12:15 |
Australia |
62–60 | |
Scoring by quarter: 17–20, 17–13, 12–17, 16–10 | ||
Pts: Knowles 17 Rebs: Norris 11 Asts: Knowles 9 |
Pts: Gürbulak 27 Rebs: Gürbulak 13 Asts: Gürbulak 12 |
10 September 2016 15:15 |
Canada |
53–78 | |
Scoring by quarter: 16–21, 12–15, 16–22, 9–20 | ||
Pts: Eng 17 Rebs: Concin, Eng 6 Asts: Concin 5 |
Pts: Knowles 23 Rebs: Norris 7 Asts: Knowles 6 |
Rio Olympic Arena, Rio de Janeiro Referees: Gustavo Mathias |
11 September 2016 08:30 |
Spain |
75–64 | |
Scoring by quarter: 11–21, 24–12, 16–10, 24–21 | ||
Pts: A. Zarzuela, P. Zarzuela 17 Rebs: A. Zarzuela 13 Asts: García 11 |
Pts: Knowles 28 Rebs: Knowles 11 Asts: Norris 6 |
Rio Olympic Arena, Rio de Janeiro Referees: Cristian Roja |
12 September 2016 13:30 |
Australia |
68–55 | |
Scoring by quarter: 14–7, 20–13, 15–10, 19–25 | ||
Pts: Ness 12 Rebs: Knowles 7 Asts: Knowles 9 |
Pts: Kozai 9 Rebs: Fujimoto 6 Asts: Mayajima 7 |
- Quarter finals
14 September 2016 17:30 |
Great Britain |
74–51 | |
Scoring by quarter: 11–15, 18–16, 23–14, 22–6 | ||
Pts: Sagar 26 Rebs: Sagar, Pratt 10 Asts: Choudhry 10 |
Pts: Norris 14 Rebs: Knowles 7 Asts: Norris 8 |
Rio Olympic Arena, Rio de Janeiro Referees: Cristian Roja |
- 5th - 6th Classification
Women's tournament
The Gliders did not qualify after finishing second to China at the 2015 Asia Oceania Qualifying Tournament.[35]
Wheelchair rugby
Australia won the 2014 World Wheelchair Rugby Championships, thereby automatically qualifying to defend the Paralympic title they won in London.[38][39] On 25 July 2016, the APC announced a team of 12 players.[40] Australia entered the tournament ranked number two in the world.[41]
Men |
---|
Ryley Batt, Chris Bond, Cameron Carr, Andrew Edmondson (d), Nazim Erdem, Ben Fawcett (d), Andrew Harrison, Josh Hose, Jason Lees, Matt Lewis (d), Ryan Scott, Jayden Warn (d) |
Officials – Coaches - Brad Dubberley (Head Coach); Greg Smith (Strength and Conditioning Coach, Officials - Sam Allan (Team Leader),Nick Sanders (Video Analyst), William Roberts (Mechanic), Darren Pickering (Personal Care/Nurse), Scott Curtis (Soft Tissue Specialist)
[17]
(d) Paralympic Games debut
Pos | Team | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts | Qualification |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 188 | 158 | +30 | 6 | Semi-finals | |
2 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 174 | 160 | +14 | 4 | ||
3 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 152 | 135 | +17 | 2 | Fifth place Match | |
4 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 125 | 186 | −61 | 0 | Seventh place Match |
Australia | 53–51 | |
---|---|---|
Report |
- Semi-finals
- Gold medal match
59–58 | ||
---|---|---|
Report |
Wheelchair tennis
Selected team of 4 athletes on 28 July 2016.[42] Sarah Calati was added to the team as a result of Russia's selection. Ben Weekes was competing at his fourth Games and wheelchair basketball gold medallist Dylan Alcott was competing in wheelchair tennis for the first time. Sarah Calati was a late inclusion due to the banning of the Russian team.[43]
Men | Women |
---|---|
Dylan Alcott, Heath Davidson (d), Ben Weekes, Adam Kellerman | Sarah Calati (d) |
Officials - Coaches - Vernon Cheung (Men's), Franscois Vogelsberger (Quad) ; Team Leader - Brenda Tierney[17]
(d) Paralympic Games debut
- Men's tournament
Athlete (seed) | Event | Round of 64 | Round of 32 | Round of 16 | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Final / BM | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | |||
Dylan Alcott | Men's singles | N/A | N/a | W 2-0 (6-0, 6-0) |
W 2-0 (6-2, 6-0) |
W 2-0 (6-0, 6-3) |
W 2-0 (6-3, 6-4) |
||
Heath Davidson | N/A | N/A | W 2-1 (2-6, 7-5, 6-1) |
L '0-2 (1-6, 2-6) |
Did not advance | ||||
Adam Kellerman | Bye | W 2-0 (7-5, 6-1) |
L 0-2 (1-6, 2-6) |
Did not advance | |||||
Ben Weekes | W 2-0 (7-5, 6-3) |
L 0-2 (0-6, 3-6) |
Did not advance | ||||||
Adam Kellerman Ben Weekes |
Men's doubles | Tadeusz Kruszelnicki (POL) L 1-2 (5-7, 6-3, 3-6) |
Did not advance | ||||||
Dylan Alcott Heath Davidson |
Men's quad doubles | Mitsuteru Moroishi (JPN) W 2-0 (6-1, 6-4) |
Andy Lapthorne (GBR) W 2-0 (6-1, 6-2) |
David Wagner (USA) W 2-1 (4-6, 6-4, 7-5) |
- Women's tournament
Athlete (seed) | Event | Round of 64 | Round of 32 | Round of 16 | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Final / BM | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | ||
Sarah Calati | Women's singles | L 0-2 (0-6, 1-6) |
Did not advance | |||||
(d)= Paralympic Games debut
Administration and support
Team Executive – Kate McLoughlin (Chef de Mission), Paul Bird (Deputy Chef de Mission), Phil Borgeaud (Head of Performance), Chris Nunn (Head of Operations)[17] Media Team – Tim Mannion (Head of Media and Broadcast), Sascha Ryner (Digital Coordinator and Media Liaison Officer - Table Tennis, Boccia), Margie McDonald (Media Liaison Officer – Athletics, Archery), Gennie Sheer (Media Liaison Officer – Cycling), Amanda Shalala (Media Liaison Officer– Rowing, Canoe), Alexandra Factor (Media Liaison Officer – Equestrian, Shooting), Neil Cross (Broadcast Liaison Officer), Alice Wheeler (Broadcast Liaison Officer), Brett Frawley (Videographer), Simon Christie (Videographer), Jeff Crow (Chief Photographer), Jacqueline Chartres (Media Manager Sydney Office)[17]
Medical Staff -
Broadcasting
The Australian Paralympic Committee purchased the broadcast rights to the Socchi Winter and Rio Summer Games for less than $400,000. It then sold the rights to the Seven Network.[44] Previously the Australian Broadcasting Corporation broadcast the Games. Seven Network broadcast the Games on 7Two as well as via digital channels, including the 7Live app.[44] There were 20 per cent more hours broadcast than the London Paralympics. Broadcast statistics included:
- Te Games reached 4.4 million TV viewers during the broadcast period[44]
- Top session average audience was 225,000 with a peak of 467,000 on the Day 7 highlights show[44]
- 251,000 online streams[44]
Major advertisers and sponsors were: Optus, Samsung, Visa Inc, Swisse, Woolworths Supermarkets and Toyota.[44]
See also
- Australia at the 2016 Summer Olympics
- Australia at the Paralympics
- Australian Paralympic Archery team
- Australian Paralympic Athletics Team
- Australian Paralympic Boccia Team
- Australian Paralympic Cycling Team
- Australian Paralympic Equestrian Team
- Australian Paralympic Paracanoe Team
- Australian Paralympic Paratriathlon Team
- Australian Paralympic Rowing Team
- Australian Paralympic Sailing Team
- Australian Paralympic Shooting Team
- Australian Paralympic Swim Team
- Australian Paralympic Table Tennis Team
- Australian Paralympic wheelchair tennis team
- Australia men's national wheelchair basketball team
- Australia national wheelchair rugby team
- Australia women's national goalball team
References
- Lulham, Amanda (12 September 2016). "Jessica Gallagher creates Australian Paralympic history as first Summer and Winter medallist". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
- Spits, Scott (19 September 2016). "Rio Paralympics 2016: Kurt Fearnley's agonising near miss for wheelchair marathon gold". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
- "Another medal for our Paralympic pro". Port Lincoln Times. 19 September 2016. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
- Blood, Greg. "That's a wrap: Australia at the Rio Paralympics". The Roar. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
- Blood, Greg. "Dylan Alcott: Rare Australian record of gold in two sports". The Roar. Retrieved 20 September 2016.
- "McLoughlin appointed as the 2016 Australian Paralympic Chef de Mission". Australian Paralympic Committee News. 13 May 2015. Archived from the original on 18 May 2015. Retrieved 13 May 2015.
- "Fearnley and Di Toro to captain 2016 team". Australian Paralympic Committee News. 4 February 2016. Archived from the original on 11 March 2016. Retrieved 4 February 2016.
- "Rio 2016 Paralympics: Brad Ness named Australia's opening ceremony flagbearer". ABC News. 6 September 2016. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
- "Rio 2016: Kurt Fearnley misses final Paralympics gold, Australia wins rugby title". ABC News. 19 September 2016. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
- "1million donation from CADBURY kicks off launch of Australian Paralympic Foundation". Australian Paralympic Committee News. 20 January 2016. Archived from the original on 11 March 2016. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
- Koerber, Rebecca (4 March 2016). "Paralympians Need To Raise Another $2 Million To Get To Rio". Huffington Post. Retrieved 6 March 2016.
- "Paralympic Team Lunch, Sydney Olympic Park". Malcolm Turnbull MP website. Retrieved 21 June 2016.
- "2016 Australian Paralympic Team officially launched". Australian Paralympic Committee News. 20 June 2016. Archived from the original on 21 August 2016. Retrieved 21 June 2016.
- "2016 Australian Paralympic Team receives nine extra spots". Australian Paralympic Committee News, 29 August 2016. Retrieved 29 August 2016.
- Walsh, Gerard (6 September 2016). "Burn has Tapp out of Rio Paralympics". The Chronicle. Retrieved 18 September 2016.
- "NSW Para-archery athlete targets bullseye in Rio". Australian Paralympic Committee News, 29 July 2016. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
- Media Guide Rio 2016 Paralympic Games (PDF). Sydney: Australian Paralympic Committee. 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 September 2016. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
- "Australian Paralympic Athletics Team announced". Australian Paralympic Committee News, 2 August 2016. Archived from the original on 29 August 2016. Retrieved 2 August 2016.
- "NSWIS boccia athlete to make history at Rio Paralympics". NSW Institute of Sport website. Retrieved 1 July 2016.
- "Australian Paralympic Cycling Team announced". Australian Paralympic Committee. Archived from the original on 10 August 2016. Retrieved 31 May 2016.
- "Paralympics: Doping ban rules Michael Gallagher out of Rio". Sydney Morning Herald. 2 September 2016. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
- "Four named on 2016 Australian Paralympic Equestrian Team". Australian Paralympic Committee News. 28 June 2016. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
- "Curtain draw on Rio 2016 as Australian Belles claim bronze". Australian Paralympic Committee News. 13 November 2015. Archived from the original on 17 November 2015. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
- "China and Japan Take Top Honors as the 2015 IBSA Goalball Asia/Pacific Championships Come to a Close". International Blind Sports Federation. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
- McDonald, Margie (25 August 2016). "Rio Paralympics Paralympic team grows by nine after Russian ban upheld". The Australian. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
- "Women's Goalball – Team Rosters – Australia". Rio 2016 Olympic and Paralympic Games. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
- "World Champions headline first Australian Paralympic Canoe Team". Australian Paralympic Committee News. 16 June 2016. Retrieved 16 June 2016.
- "DEBUTANT PARATRIATHLETES PUT ICING ON THE RIO CAKE". Triathlon Australia website. Retrieved 3 August 2016.
- "Australian Paralympic Rowers to turn silver into gold". Australian Paralympic Committee News. 11 July 2016. Retrieved 11 July 2016.
- "Australia's Paralympic Sailors set sail for their last Games". Australian Paralympic Committee News. 15 July 2016. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
- "Six Australian shooters to target Paralympic gold in Rio". Australian Paralympic Committee News. 17 May 2016. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
- Media Guide Rio 2016 Paralympic Games (PDF). Sydney: Australian Paralympic Committee. 2016. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 September 2016. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
- "Australian Paralympic Swimming Team announced". Australian Paralympic Committee News, 1 August 2016. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- "2016 Paralympic co-captain leads the way for 5-strong Para-table tennis team". Australian Paralympic Committee News. 27 April 2016. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
- "Heartbreak and Elation for Gliders and Rollers at AOZ qualifying tournament". Basketball Australia. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
- "Australian Rollers ready for Rio 2016 revenge". Australian Paralympic Committee News, 19 July 2016. Retrieved 19 July 2016.
- "Groups drawn for wheelchair basketball at Rio 2016 Paralympic Games". Rio 2016. Archived from the original on 26 August 2016. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
- "Australia wins Wheelchair Rugby World Championship to guarantee a place at the Rio 2016 Games". 11 August 2014. Archived from the original on 15 September 2014. Retrieved 30 August 2014.
- "USA, Canada and Mexico win places at Rio 2016 Paralympic Games via Parapan American Games". Rio 2016. 18 August 2015. Archived from the original on 27 December 2015. Retrieved 26 December 2015.
- "Steelers aim to maintain their reign in Rio". Australian Paralympic Committee News. 25 July 2016. Archived from the original on 29 August 2016. Retrieved 25 July 2016.
- "IWRF Rankings". International Wheelchair Rugby Federation. International Wheelchair Rugby Federation. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
- "Paralympic glory in sight for Australia's wheelchair tennis athletes". Australian Paralympic Committee website. Archived from the original on 29 August 2016. Retrieved 28 July 2016.
- "CALATI HEADED TO RIO PARALYMPICS". Tennis Australia website. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
- Hickman, y Arvind (29 September 2016). "Paralympics move to commercial TV a win for Seven and sponsors". AdNews. Retrieved 30 September 2016.
External links
- Australian Paralympic Committee 2016 Rio Portal
- Australian Paralympic Committee Media Guide Rio 2016 Paralympic Games