Wheelchair basketball at the 1972 Summer Paralympics

Wheelchair basketball at the 1972 Summer Paralympics consisted of men's and women's team events.

The original ISMGF classification system used at early Paralympic Games.
Wheelchair basketball
at the IV Paralympic Games
Paralympic Wheelchair Basketball
Medalists
 United States (USA) (men)
 Argentina (ARG) (women)
 Israel (ISR) (men)
 Jamaica (JAM) (women)
 Argentina (ARG) (men)
 Israel (ISR) (women)

From 1969 to 1973, a classification system designed by Australian Dr. Bedwell was used. This system used some muscle testing to determine which class incomplete paraplegics should be classified in. It used a point system based on the ISMGF classification system. Class IA, IB and IC were worth 1 point. Class II for people with lesions between T1-T5 and no balance were also worth 1 point. Class III for people with lesions at T6-T10 and have fair balance were worth 1 point. Class IV was for people with lesions at T11-L3 and good trunk muscles. They were worth 2 points. Class V was for people with lesions at L4 to L5 with good leg muscles. Class IV was for people with lesions at S1-S4 with good leg muscles. Class V and IV were worth 3 points. The Daniels/Worthington muscle test was used to determine who was in class V and who was class IV. Paraplegics with 61 to 80 points on this scale were not eligible. A team could have a maximum of 11 points on the floor.[1]

Medal summary

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men's team
 United States (USA)  Israel (ISR)  Argentina (ARG)
Women's team
 Argentina (ARG)  Jamaica (JAM)  Israel (ISR)

Source: Paralympic.org [2]

gollark: More so, I mean.
gollark: If that was true then everything would be horribly broken by now anyway.
gollark: And `.`.
gollark: _ too.
gollark: - works fine in URLs.

See also

References

  1. Chapter 4. 4 - Position Statement on background and scientific rationale for classification in Paralympic sport (PDF). International Paralympic Committee. December 2009.
  2. "Medallists, 1972 Paralympic Game, Wheelchair rugby". Official Website of the Paralympic Movement. 1972. Retrieved 2012-11-02.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.