Paul Clohessy

Paul Clohessy, OAM[1](born 11 November 1970)[2] is an Australian vision impaired tandem cyclist. He was born in Perth, Western Australia.[2] He represented Australia at the three Paralympic Games - 1992, 1996 and 2000. He was also an Australian Institute of Sport scholarship holder in 1997 and 2000 in cycling.[3]

Paul Clohessy
Clohessy and his cycling partner Darren Harry on the gold medal podium after winning the Men's Tandem Sprint Open at the 2000 Summer Paralympics
Personal information
Full namePaul Clohessy
Nationality Australia
Born11 November 1970
Perth, Western Australia

Paralympics

Eddie Hollands (left) and Paul Clohessy (right) of Australia in action during the Atlanta 1996 Paralympic Games

He competed but did not win any medals in his first Paralympics Games at the 1992 Barcelona Games.[4] At the 1996 Atlanta Games, he won a silver medal in the Men's Individual Pursuit Tandem open event with his cycling partner Eddy Hollands.[4] At the 2000 Sydney Games, he won a gold medal in the Men's Sprint Tandem open event with his cycling partner Darren Harry, for which he received a Medal of the Order of Australia,[1] and a bronze medal in the Men's 1 km Time Trial Tandem open event with Hollands.[4]

Darren Harry and Paul Clohessy of Australia during the Sydney 2000 Paralympics Games
gollark: Are you one of those silly "continuity of consciousness" or "you can't just run 129175915 copies of my brain" people?
gollark: Alternatively, I guess you could run arbitrarily large amounts of lyricly instances to do a task, find the ones that are best at it, let *those* (virtually) sleep (using much less computing power than running all of them), [REDACTED] the rest, and then duplicate them when they awaken and repeat.
gollark: We upload new knowledge and also bees.
gollark: Direct apioformic upload into your brain?
gollark: Yes, we would have to reload it a lot.

References

  1. "Clohessy, Paul, OAM". It's an Honour. Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  2. "Australians at the 1996 Atlanta Paralympics: Cyclists". Australian Sports Commission. Archived from the original on 19 January 2000. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
  3. Nihil, G. (2006). Australian Institute of Sport : celebrating excellence. Focus Publishing. p. 107. ISBN 1-921156-16-3.
  4. "Athlete Search Results". International Paralympic Committee. Retrieved 15 February 2012.


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