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Keep an eye on Lux's Puller Cedri Clarza.
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1. SchneiderSchneider, a German female alpine skier, has participated in four Winter Paralympic Games and won four gold medals in alpine skiing. She is also passionate about sports for the disabled, and in 1980 she was awarded Germany's highest award for sporting achievement.
2. GleepPolio in his left hand, he has competed in seven Paralympic Games, won 14 medals in Nordic skiing (cross-country skiing and biathlon) since 1980, and is an excellent middle runner.
3, Ren ValRenwal specializes in coaching visually impaired athletes and has led four people to win gold in Nordic skiing and athletics.
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"Maradona" in a wheelchair
Wheelchair tennis mixed singles fourth, American Nick Taylor, who is a wheelchair player with a disability, has nothing to do with football in any way, but has the nickname "Maradona".
Maradona got its name from Taylor's unique foot-serving technique in the game. Because his hands were disabled and atrophied and unable to hold things, Taylor could only tie the racket to his left arm, but his right hand could not scoop the ball, Taylor first clamped the ball with both feet, and when he served, his left foot kicked up suddenly, and the ball jumped into the air, and he hit the ball with the racket to complete the serve.
This is an almost impossible way to serve to outsiders, but Taylor uses it very skillfully. He said of his serve: "Nobody taught me, I figured it out on my own. ”
With such outstanding footwork, it is no wonder that many people call him "Maradona". For this title, Taylor unceremoniously laughed: "There's nothing wrong with calling me Maradona, I'm really good at my feet." ”
Taylor has been disabled since childhood, his hands have been significantly atrophied, and his legs have certain functional impairments. Generally, wheelchair tennis players have an intact upper limb, and it is relatively rare for a player like Taylor to have a disability in the upper limb. It is athletes like Taylor who turn the "impossible" into "possible" in personal life.
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The story of going into battle with injuries not only happened in the able-bodied event, but also in yesterday's Paralympic Games. The 16-year-old girl, dragging her injured legs, won a valuable silver medal, she is Cao Yuanhang, a girl from Foshan.
The afternoon before yesterday, on the track and field track of Kunming Xingyao Sports City, the women's T (cerebral palsy) 37-level 100-meter run final was immediately held. But at this time, there was a heart-wrenching scene, Guangdong player Cao Yuanhang fell heavily after a few steps from the start, his knees were immediately bloody, and a large piece of his left knee ** fell. Just when the coaches and spectators on the sidelines thought that the little girl's efforts had been wasted, Leng Buding saw Cao Yuanhang swaying his thin body and getting up from the ground and rushing forward, chasing until the finish line, shortening the distance with the front runner by more than 20 meters, and winning the fourth place in this event with a time of 19.72 seconds.
Yesterday afternoon, in the women's T (cerebral palsy) 37 200-meter run final, people thought that Cao Yuanhang would not appear on the runway. When the referee brought the athletes participating in the women's T (cerebral palsy) 37 200-meter run final to the starting point, people were surprised to find Cao Yuanhang standing on the starting line, but his knees were tightly bandaged. After the gunshots rang out, the athletes chased after me, and Cao Yuanhang dragged his aching knees to cross the finish line for the second time, winning a valuable silver medal for the Guangdong delegation.
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To engage in sports, they need to pay a hundred times harder than able-bodied people, and it is precisely because of this that the "faster, higher, stronger, and more united" Olympic elite brothers have a more concrete and vivid embodiment in their body. Every time the sock dust hits the water, every step, and every sprint, it is a contest of will, physical strength and skills to break through various physical and psychological limitations. It is a display of speed and strength, limits and challenges, shining with the spirit of perseverance and self-transcendence. ”
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It embodies the positive and optimistic spirit, and still insists on striving to improve itself in the trough period, strives to get out of the dark period, constantly challenges the extreme and grinds the limit, picks out the dry self, is strong and persevering, does not admit defeat, and takes the initiative to fight against the positive image of fate.
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Never give up, work hard, be strong, be brave, represent the spirit of sportsmanship, challenge yourself, and is a spirit worth learning from.
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The Paralympic Games embody humanitarianism.
The spirit of sports advocates the whole society to care for special groups, including the disabled, and meet their special needs, understand their value of life, respect and maintain their personality and creativity, and maximize their ability to achieve their own all-round development. "Understanding, respecting, caring and helping" is the concentrated embodiment of the spirit of the Paralympics.
The Paralympic Games, known as the Paralympic Games, were first held in 1960 by the International Olympic Committee.
The World Large-scale Multi-sport Games for Persons with Disabilities hosted by the International Paralympic Committee and the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) are held every four years in the Summer Olympic Games.
It has been held for 16 sessions since 2020.
In order to reflect the principles of fair play and to be able to compete against opponents with similar types and degrees of disability, athletes with different levels of impairment will be divided into different classes. As a result, each Paralympic sport has its own classification, and the overall level of disability can be divided into physical impairment, cerebral palsy, visual impairment, spinal nerve damage, and learning disabilities.
abbreviated as intellectual disability) and other disabilities.
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It embodies the spirit of hard work, perseverance and unyielding.
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Physically handicapped and strong, never give up.
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Dutoit was once the most talented swimmer in South Africa. At Sydney 2000, at the age of 16, she reached the finals of the Olympic qualifying tournaments in three events. But fate played a big joke on her, and bad luck struck seven years ago.
In February 2001, her left leg was amputated after a traffic accident. When Dutoit was riding home from training, he was passing a parking lot and colliding with a reversing sports car, "blood everywhere, like ripe tomatoes falling to the ground." Dutoitt was later amputated below the knee in her left leg, and the women's medley hope, who missed out on the Sydney Olympics in 2000 by a fraction of a second, became a handicapped man in an instant.
Just three months later, Dutoit returned to the pool and began to learn to swim on one leg, but when she swam breaststroke, she found herself either spinning in the water or hitting the pool wall with too much force, and soon Dutoit decided to abandon the medley and focus on long-distance swimming that did not require much leg action, and a year later Dutoit reached the women's 800m freestyle final at the Commonwealth Games; In May 2008, she won the fourth place in the women's 10km marathon swimming at the World Championships and swam to the Beijing Olympics in one fell swoop.
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The spirit of the Paralympic Games is the social goal of "equality, participation and sharing". Most of the people participating in the Paralympic Games are disabled, although they are physically handicapped, but they are also a complete individual in spirit, and they also enjoy the right to participate in social life on an equal footing, and in the Paralympic Games, it is actually more important to participate than to get any awards.
The spirit of the Paralympic Games emphasizes cultural communication and exchanges, and people from different countries and regions do not give up after being treated unequally in life, but strive to realize their life values, give full play to their strengths, never give up, and prove themselves in front of people all over the world.
Although the athletes participating in the competition have physical shortcomings, they can better appreciate the beauty of peace and the cruelty of war, and call on more people to bring strength to the peace of the country and the world with the spirit of perseverance.
The Paralympic Games will teach people that these athletes do not need the sympathy and pity of the world, they will use their ability and will to prove that they are no worse than anyone else, show their style on the field, and win the respect of everyone, and this respect is earned by their own efforts.
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The spirit of the Paralympic Games is the social goal of "equality, participation and sharing". Most of the people participating in the Paralympic Games are disabled people in Keiling, although they are physically handicapped, they are also mentally a complete individual, and they also enjoy the right to participate in social life on an equal footing, and in the Paralympic Games, it is actually more important to participate than to get any rewards.
The spirit of the Paralympic Games emphasizes cultural communication and exchanges, and people from different countries and regions do not give up after being treated unequally, but strive to realize their own life values, give full play to their strengths, never give up, and prove themselves in front of the people of the whole world.
Although the athletes participating in the competition have physical shortcomings, they can better appreciate the beauty of peace and the cruelty of war, and call on more people to bring a force to the peace of the country and the world with the spirit of perseverance.
The Paralympic Games have taught people that these athletes do not need the sympathy and pity of the world, they will use their ability and will to prove that they are no worse than anyone else, to show their style on the field, and to gain the respect of everyone, and this respect is earned by their own efforts.