Yu Chui Yee

Alison Yu Chui Yee (Chinese: 余翠怡; Jyutping: jyu4 ceoi3 ji4; born 29 March 1984) is a wheelchair fencer from Hong Kong. When she was 11 years old, she suffered from bone cancer, leading to the amputation of her left leg. She began as a swimmer but switched to fencing at the age of 17.[1] At the 2004 Summer Paralympics, she won four gold medals in both the individual and team events of épée and foil. She was the first athlete to win four gold medals in fencing in category A in 2004, actually the first female to achieve this enormous task was Marta Wyrzykowska Makowska in Sydney 2000 Paralympics although she was in category B. At the 2008 Summer Paralympics, she represented Hong Kong again, but since the team matches were canceled, she only won one gold and one silver medal in the individual events.[2]

Yu Chui Yee
Medal record
Representing  Hong Kong
Women's wheelchair fencing
Paralympic Games
2004 Athens Individual foil A
2004 Athens Team foil
2004 Athens Individual épée A
2004 Athens Team épée
2008 Beijing Individual foil A
2012 London Individual foil A
2012 London Individual épée A
2008 Beijing Individual épée A
2016 Rio de Janeiro Individual épée A
2016 Rio de Janeiro Women's team épée
2012 London Women's team - Open

Career

Yui Chui Yee first made her Paralympic games debut representing Hong Kong in the 2004 Summer Paralympic Games in Athens. Yu won four gold medals in wheelchair fencing in category A individual foil, team foil, individual épée, and team épée, becoming the first athlete to win four gold medals in fencing.[3]

In the 2008 Summer Paralympics in Beijing, Yu won gold in the Individual foil category A, and earned silver in the Individual épée category A, being bested by Zhang Chuncui, representing China.[4] However, in the London 2012 Summer Paralympics, Yu took home gold medals in both individual épée category A and individual foil category A. She also earned a bronze medal in the open category team épée alongside teammates Chan Yui Chong and Fan Pui Shan.[5]

During the 2016 Rio Paralympic Games, Yu secured a silver medal in category A individual foil and in team épée with teammates Chan Yui Chong and Ng Justine Charissa.[6]

Personal life

In addition to attaining 7 Paralympic gold medals, Yu Chui Yee is also a radio host, a columnist on the official paralympic movement website, and even a co-founder of the Fencing Sport Academy for young children and teenagers. In her spare time, Yu stated she is an avid swimmer, runner, and even plans to take up scuba diving and paragliding.[7]

Following her Paralympic debut in the 2004 Paralympic games in Athens, Yu was granted admission into the Chinese University of Hong Kong's Department of Geography and Resource Management where she obtained her MA in Sports Studies.[7]

gollark: I mostly only use my phone for occasionally taking bad photographs of things and photographing documents, so in my endless search for a new phone (hopefully finishing that tomorrow...) I mostly just ignore cameras.
gollark: I mean, if you care a lot about photography, than obviously buying a phone with good cameras is smart.
gollark: I had a phone with almost identical specs about four years back and it worked *fine*.
gollark: > like the pinephone is just a generic piece of crap with slow CPU, almost no RAM, horrible camera, mediocre battery, etcI mean, it's basically raspberry-pi-level and the battery is standard for phones now, so meh.
gollark: It's probably just because they love their vendor lock-in.

References

  1. Saeki, John (7 September 2008). "HKG's wheelchair champion sets out to fend off China". France 24. Retrieved 2008-10-25.
  2. Results for Chui Yee Yu from the International Paralympic Committee (archived)
  3. "Wheelchair Fencing at the Athens 2004 Paralympic Games". Paralympic.org. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  4. "Wheelchair Fencing at the Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games". Paralympic.org. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  5. "Wheelchair Fencing at the London 2012 Paralympic Games". Paralympic.org. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  6. "Wheelchair Fencing at the Rio 2016 Paralympic Games". Paralympic.org. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  7. "Crossing Swords with Fate—Alison Yu conquers the unconquerable". 香港中文大學 The Chinese University of Hong Kong. Retrieved 2019-02-26.


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