After a two-week break, Paris once again readies itself to host the best athletes in the world with the 2024 Paralympic Games set to get underway on Wednesday. The quadrennial event will take place from August 28 to September 8.
A total of 18 of the 35 venues used for the Olympics will be used for the Paralympics with more than 4,400 athletes set to compete in 549 events across 22 sports.
History of the Paralympics
The term Paralympics indicates an event taking place in parallel with the Olympics.
The idea of an athletic event for people with disabilities came up after the second World War in England. Sir Ludwigg Guttmann, a neurologist who fled to England from Nazi Germany before the war is credited with the founding of organised sports for people with physical disablities.
While working as a neurologist at the Stoke Mandeville Hospital, Guttmann organised the Stoke Mandeville Games for war veterans at the hospital to coincide with the 1948 London Olympics.
The first Paralympics were held in Rome 1960. In 2001, the International Olympic Committee and the International Paralympic Committee signed an agreement that ensured that cities who bid to host the Olympic Games would also be mandated to hold the Paralympic Games.
What to expect in Paris
The Games will open with a ceremony at the Place de la Concorde, the square in the centre of Paris where skateboarding and other urban sports took place during the Olympics.
Just like the Olympics ceremony on the River Seine, the ceremony on Wednesday takes place away from the main stadium for the first time at a Paralympics.
The Paralympic flame was lit at Stoke Mandeville Hospital in England, the birthplace of the Paralympic Games, and brought to France through the Channel Tunnel.
Theatre director Thomas Jolly, who also oversaw the Olympics opening ceremony, said there was a deep symbolism in putting the Paralympics ceremony in the centre of the French capital – a city whose Metro system, in particular, is completely unadapted to the needs of wheelchair users.
The Paris Paralympics will feature 22 sports with 20 of them being common with the Olympic Games. The Paralympics feature two sports which are unique only for para athletes — goalball and boccia.
The Paralympic movement covers 10 impairment types that fall broadly into three categories: physical impairments, vision impairment and intellectual impairment.
Some sports are open to athletes in all categories, while others are reserved for specific impairments.
Within each category, athletes are assessed to see whether they meet a minimum impairment level, to ensure a fair playing field – although there have been controversies over some placements in recent years.
Many visually impaired athletes use assistants to compete. In track events, athletes use guide runners who are linked to the athlete via a strap. This helps the athlete when running along the curve of the track. The guide runners cannot pull the athlete along and must cross the finish line behind the athlete.
In cycling events, visually impaired athletes pair up with a guide, also known as a pilot, who rides in front on a tandem bike.
Guide runners and pilots are also common in the triathlon. Swimming features “tappers”, who tap the athlete’s head or body as they approach turns or the finish to keep them safe.
One of the most unique features of para athletics, which was introduced at Tokyo 2020 was the 4x100m universal relay event. Like the mixed relay, the universal relay features two men and two women with each leg being run by an athlete with a different impairment.
The relay is started by a visually impaired athlete, followed by an amputee sprinter. The third leg is run by an athlete with cerebral palsy while a wheelchair athlete anchors the race.
India at the Paralympics
India won its first individual gold medal in Olympic or Paralympic Games back in 1972 when Murlikant Petkar won gold in the men’s 50m freestyle event. In 1984, Joginder Singh Bedi became the first and only Indian to win three medals in a single Olympic or Paralympic event when he won two silver and one bronze medals in track and field.
After 20 years without a medal in the Paralympic Games, Devendra Jhajharia, the current Paralympic Committee of India president, won gold in javelin throw in Athens while Rajinder Rahelu won India’s first medal in powerlifting.
Jhajharia joined Bedi in the three-medal club after defending his title in Rio 2016 before winning silver at Tokyo 2020.
Before Tokyo 2020, India had won 12 medals at the Paralympic Games. At Tokyo 2020, India more than doubled its tally by winning 19 medals including five gold, eight silver and six bronze medals.
India's Paralympics medal tally
Year | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|
1972 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
1984 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 4 |
2004 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
2012 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
2016 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 |
2020 | 5 | 8 | 6 | 19 |
Total | 9 | 12 | 10 | 31 |
India's Paralympic medals by sports
Sport | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|
Athletics | 4 | 9 | 5 | 18 |
Shooting | 2 | 1 | 2 | 5 |
Badminton | 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 |
Swimming | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Table Tennis | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Powerlifting | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Archery | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Total | 9 | 12 | 10 | 31 |
Tokyo 2020 saw India win its first Paralympic medals in archery, badminton, shooting and table tennis. A host of medallists from Tokyo 2020 will be in action in Paris 2024.
India’s male flag bearer Sumit Antil (shot putter Bhagyashree Jadhav is India’s female flag bearer) is favourite to defend his javelin throw title. In Tokyo, Antil thrice set the world record in the final on the way to winning gold. He became the first F64 javelin thrower to register a throw past the 70m mark and holds the world record of 73.29m which he set at the Hangzhou Para Asian Games last year.
Mariyappan Thangavelu will be aiming to join Bedi and Jhajharia in winning three Paralympic medals when he takes part in the men’s T63 high jump event – he had won gold in Rio 2016 followed by silver in Tokyo.
Rifle shooter Avani Lekhara, who won a gold and bronze in Tokyo, could become the first Indian to win more than three Paralympic medals should she medal in each of the three events she is competing in Paris.
Paddler Bhavina Patel and compound archer Sheetal Devi are also among the favourites to finish on the podium in Paris as are the likes of recurve archer Harvinder Singh, pistol shooter Manish Narwal, shuttlers Krishna Nagar and Manoj Sarkar and discus thrower Yogesh Kathuniya among others.
In Paris, 84 Indian athletes will compete in 12 sports. Unlike at the Olympics, India are expected to win a host of medals from track and field events – 15 of the 17 Indians who won medals at the 2024 World Championships are competing in Paris.
Also expect medals from archery, badminton, table tennis and shooting.
Indian Paralympic contigent for Paris 2024
Sport | Female | Male | Total |
---|---|---|---|
Archery | 3 | 3 | 6 |
Athletics | 10 | 28 | 38 |
Badminton | 6 | 7 | 13 |
Cyling | 1 | 1 | 2 |
Judo | 1 | 1 | 2 |
Paracanoeing | 2 | 1 | 3 |
Powerlifting | 2 | 2 | 4 |
Rowing | 1 | 1 | 2 |
Shooting | 3 | 7 | 10 |
Swimming | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Table Tennis | 2 | 0 | 2 |
Taekwondo | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Total | 32 | 52 | 84 |
Archery
Name | Event | Sport Class |
---|---|---|
Sheetal Devi | Women's Individual Compound - Open | Sport Class: ST |
Sarita Adhana | Women's Individual Compound - Open | Sport Class: W2 |
Pooja Jatyan | Women's Individual Recurve - Open | Sport Class: ST |
Rakesh Kumar | Men's Individual Compound - Open | Sport Class: W2 |
Shyam Sundar Swami | Men's Individual Compound - Open | Sport Class: ST |
Harvinder Singh | Men's Individual Recurve - Open | Sport Class: ST |
Athletics
Name | Event | Sport Class |
---|---|---|
Preethi Pal | Women's 100m | Sport Class: T35 |
Preethi Pal | Women's 200m | Sport Class: T35 |
Simran Sharma | Women's 200m | Sport Class: T12 |
Deepthi Jeevanji | Women's 400m | Sport Class: T20 |
Rakshita Raju | Women's 1500m | Sport Class: T11 |
Kanchan Lakhani | Women's Discus Throw | Sport Class: T53 |
Sakshi Kasana | Women's Discus Throw | Sport Class: T55 |
Karamjyoti | Women's Discus Throw | Sport Class: T55 |
Bhavanaben Chaudhary | Women's Javelin Throw | Sport Class: F46 |
Bhagyashree Jadhav | Women's Shot Put | Sport Class: F34 |
Amisha Rawat | Women's Shot Put | Sport Class: F46 |
Dilip Gavit | Men's 400m | Sport Class: T47 |
Dharambir | Men's Club Throw | Sport Class: F51 |
Pranav Soorma | Men's Club Throw | Sport Class: F51 |
Amit Kumar Saroha | Men's Club Throw | Sport Class: F51 |
Yogesh Kathuniya | Men's Discus Throw | Sport Class: F56 |
Sharad Kumar | Men's High Jump | Sport Class: T63 |
Mariyappan Thangavelu | Men's High Jump | Sport Class: T63 |
Shailesh Kumar | Men's High Jump | Sport Class: T63 |
Nishad Kumar | Men's High Jump | Sport Class: T47 |
Rampal Chahar | Men's High Jump | Sport Class: T47 |
Praveen Kumar | Men's High Jump | Sport Class: T64 |
Navdeep Singh | Men's Javelin Throw | Sport Class: F41 |
Ajeet Singh | Men's Javelin Throw | Sport Class: F46 |
Rinku | Men's Javelin Throw | Sport Class: F46 |
Sundar Singh Gurjar | Men's Javelin Throw | Sport Class: F46 |
Dipesh Kumar | Men's Javelin Throw | Sport Class: F54 |
Parveen Kumar | Men's Javelin Throw | Sport Class: F57 |
Sandip Sanjay Sargar | Men's Javelin Throw | Sport Class: F64 |
Sandeep | Men's Javelin Throw | Sport Class: F64 |
Sumit Antil | Men's Javelin Throw | Sport Class: F64 |
Arvind Malik | Men's Shot Put | Sport Class: F35 |
Manu | Men's Shot Put | Sport Class: F37 |
Rongali Ravi | Men's Shot Put | Sport Class: F40 |
Sachin Sarjerao Khilari | Men's Shot Put | Sport Class: F46 |
Mohammed Yasser | Men's Shot Put | Sport Class: F46 |
Rohit Kumar | Men's Shot Put | Sport Class: F46 |
Hokato Hotozhe Sema | Men's Shot Put | Sport Class: F64 |
Soman Rana | Men's Shot Put | Sport Class: F64 |
Badminton
Name | Event | Sport Class |
---|---|---|
Manasi Joshi | Women's Singles | SL3 |
Mandeep Kaur | Women's Singles | SL3 |
Palak Kohli | Women's Singles | SL4 |
Thulasimathi Murugesan | Women's Singles | SL5 |
Manisha Ramadass | Women's Singles | SL5 |
Nithya Sre Sivan | Women's Singles | SH6 |
Manoj Sarkar | Men's Singles | SL3 |
Nitesh Kumar | Men's Singles | SL3 |
Suhas Lalinakere Yathiraj | Men's Singles | SL4 |
Sukant Kadam | Men's Singles | SL4 |
Tarun Dhillon | Men's Singles | SL4 |
Krishna Nagar | Men's Singles | SH6 |
Sivarajan Solaimalai | Men's Singles | SH6 |
Nitesh Kumar and Thulasimathi Murugesan | Mixed Doubles | SL3–SU5 |
Suhas Lalinakere Yathiraj and Palak Kohli | Mixed Doubles | SL3–SU5 |
Sivarajan Solaimalai and Nithya Sre Sivan | Mixed Doubles | SH6 |
Canoeing
Name | Event | Sport Class |
---|---|---|
Pooja Ojha | Women's Paracanoeing | KL1 |
Prachi Yadav | Women's Paracanoeing | VL2 |
Yash Kumar | Men's Paracanoeing | KL1 |
Cycling
Name | Event | Sport Class |
---|---|---|
Jyoti Gaderiya | Women's time trial | C1-3 |
Jyoti Gaderiya | Women's road race | C1-3 |
Jyoti Gaderiya | Women's 500 m time trial | C1-3 |
Jyoti Gaderiya | Women's 3000 m pursuit | C1-3 |
Arshad Shaik | Men's time trial | C2 |
Arshad Shaik | Men's road race | C1-3 |
Arshad Shaik | Men's 1000 m time trial | C1-3 |
Arshad Shaik | Men's 3000 m pursuit | C2 |
Judo
Name | Event | Sport Class |
---|---|---|
Kokila Kaushiklate | Women's 48kg | J2 |
Kapil Parmar | Men's 60kg | J1 |
Powerlifting
Name | Event | Sport Class |
---|---|---|
Sakina Khatun | Women's 45kg | PWL |
Kasthuri Rajamani | Women's 67kg | PWL |
Paramjeet Kumar | Men's 49kg | PWL |
Ashok | Men's 65kg | PWL |
Rowing
Name | Event | Sport Class |
---|---|---|
Anita and Narayana Konganapalle | Mixed Double Sculls | PR3 |
Shooting
Name | Event | Sport Class |
---|---|---|
Avani Lekhara | R2 Women's 10 m air rifle | SH1 |
Mona Agarwal | R2 Women's 10 m air rifle | SH1 |
Avani Lekhara | R8 Women's 50 m rifle 3 positions | SH1 |
Mona Agarwal | R8 Women's 50 m rifle 3 positions | SH1 |
Rubina Francis | P2 Women's 10 m air pistol | SH1 |
Rudransh Khandelwal | P1 Men's 10 m air pistol | SH1 |
Manish Narwal | P1 Men's 10 m air pistol | SH1 |
Swaroop Mahavir Unhalkar | R1 Men's 10 m air rifle standing | SH1 |
Avani Lekhara | R3 Mixed 10 metre air rifle prone | SH1 |
Sidhartha Babu | R3 Mixed 10 metre air rifle prone | SH1 |
Sriharsha Ramakrishna Davareddi | R4 Mixed 10 m air rifle | SH2 |
Sriharsha Ramakrishna Davareddi | R5 Mixed 50 m rifle prone | SH2 |
Mona Agarwal | R6 Mixed 50 m Rifle Prone | SH1 |
Sidhartha Babu | R6 Mixed 50 m Rifle Prone | SH1 |
Nihal Singh | P3 Mixed 25 m pistol | SH1 |
Amir Ahmed Bhat | P3 Mixed 25 m pistol | SH1 |
Nihal Singh | P4 Mixed 50 m pistol | SH1 |
Rudransh Khandelwal | P4 Mixed 50 m pistol | SH1 |
Swimming
Name | Event | Sport Class |
---|---|---|
Suyash Narayan Jadhav | Men's 50m butterfly | S7 |
Table Tennis
Name | Event | Sport Class |
---|---|---|
Sonalben Patel | Women's Individual | C3 |
Bhavinaben Patel | Women's Individual | C4 |
Sonalben Patel and Bhavinaben Patel | Women's Doubles | D10 |
Taekwondo
Name | Event | Sport Class |
---|---|---|
Aruna Tanwar | Women's 47kg | K44 |
Stars to watch out for in Paris
Every Games creates new stars and this edition will be no exception. So, look to American above-the-knee amputee sprinter/high jumper Ezra Frech, who at 19, has already attracted a burst of publicity about his journey to Paris.
There are some familiar names returning too – British amputee sprinter Jonnie Peacock was one of the high-profile athletes of London 2012 and dusted off his running blade last year to make a comeback in his bid to win a medal at a fourth consecutive Paralympics.
Away from the track, Iranian sitting volleyball legend Morteza Mehrzad, who stands 8ft 1in (2.46m) tall, will attempt to take gold again. Swimmer Gabriel dos Santos Araujo is aiming to defend his 50m backstroke and 200m freestyle S2 while also upgrading the silver he won in 100m backstroke into gold.
The Netherlands’ Diede de Groot is the favourite to defend her women’s singles wheelchair tennis gold along with the doubles title she won with Aniek van Koot. De Groot is widely regarded as the greatest wheelchair tennis player of all time.
The 36-time Grand Slam winner had a three-year 145-match winning streak from February 2021 to May 2024. In 2021, she achieved the first Super Slam in the sport when she won all four Grand Slam titles, the Paralympic Gold and the Wheelchair Tennis Masters title. In 2022 and 2023, she became the first tennis player in any discipline to defend all four Grand Slam titles.
Paralympic powerhouse China will send a strong squad – the Chinese dominated the medals table at the Covid-delayed Games in Tokyo three years ago, winning 96 golds. Britain were second with 41 golds.
Riding the wave of its Olympic team’s success, host nation France will be aiming for a substantial upgrade on the 11 golds it won in 2021.
Ukraine, traditionally one of the top medal-winning nations at the Paralympics, will send a team of 140 athletes spread over 17 sports despite the challenges they face in preparing as the war against Russian forces rages.
The 96 athletes from Russia and Belarus will compete under a neutral banner but are barred from the opening and closing ceremonies.
The Russian and Belarusian federations were both suspended following the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 but their competitors are allowed to compete as neutrals providing they have not shown any support for the war.
After a short break, Paris will once again be buzzing with the best athletes in the world, all eager to make a mark in sports biggest stage.
(With AFP Inputs)
The 2024 Paris Paralympics will be broadcast on Sports18 and live streamed on Jio Cinema.
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