Paralympics GB surpasses their London 2012 medal tally
The team have now won 126 medals, including nine more golds.
Gordon Reid won the wheelchair tennis final, Hannah Cockroft clinched
the T34 800m, there was swimming relay gold and Sophie Christiansen,Lee
Pearson and Natasha Baker won in the dressage.
Paul Blake took T36 400m gold, there was boccia success for David
Smith, and John Walker landed archery gold.
Sophie Wells, 26, and 67-year-old Anne Dunham both won silver in the
dressage, and silvers also went to T1-2 road cyclist David Stone and
Andrew Marren, in the S5 50m backstroke.
The Briton finished behind Brazilian swimming superstar Daniel Dias,
who won his third gold and seventh medal of the Games. The 28-year-old
has now amassed 21 Paralympic medals in his career.
There was British medal success in the table tennis as Will Bayley,
Aaron McKibbin and Ross Wilson won class 6-8 bronze in the team event.
And discus thrower Dan Greaves maintained his record of having won a
medal at every Games, by winning his fifth in his fifth Paralympics.
This time it was bronze for the Leicestershire-born 33-year-old in the
F44 final.
Britain have a total of 58 gold medals from these Games and reached
the 50 mark when Blake won his T36 race in a time of 54.49 seconds -
nearly a second clear of Ukraine's Roman Pavlyk and New Zealander
William Stedman.
UK Sport set ParalympicsGB a target of 121 medals, which was achieved
when Cockroft blitzed the field to win in the Olympic Stadium and
team-mate Kare Adenegan took bronze.
The team have also surpassed the 122 medals won at Atlanta 1996.
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Yorkshirewoman Hannah
Cockcroft has now won five gold medals from two Paralympics |
'That mark is incredible'
Reaction to Great Britain's achievement soon followed.
Swimmer Sascha Kindred, who won gold in the SM6,told BBC Radio 5
live: "When we competed in London and reached the mark we thought it'd
be hard to beat. "This team has worked hard in training and to pass that
mark is incredible. I'm so glad to be part of this team. ParalympicsGB
has done an amazing job." UK sports minister Tracey Crouch also tweeted
a photo, just moments after Cockroft's victory.
Liz Nicholl, CEO of UK Sport, said: "Rio 2016 is further proof of the
effectiveness of our high-performance system across Olympic and
Paralympic sport.
"The outstanding results at the ever-more-competitive Paralympic
Games show we have more strength in depth and breadth than ever before
and our increased investment over this Rio cycle has been targeted in a
way that has made a significant difference."
Tim Hollingsworth, chief executive of the British Paralympic
Association, added: "We knew Rio 2016 would be the most competitive yet
so to be able to match that with our own highly competitive performances
is fantastic. We hope it will provide the inspiration in the UK and
globally to inspire a better world for disabled people."
ParalympicsGB now have two more targets in their sights - the 128 won
at Barcelona 1992 and the 131 achieved at Sydney 2000.
"Make no mistake it is a great achievement by ParalympicsGB to beat
their London 2012 medal of 120 in Rio.
"However, we need to acknowledge that Russia are not here.
It's not like in the Olympics where the nation's numbers were reduced
by bans, the International Paralympic Committee [IPC] blocked Russia's
entire delegation from participating in the Games.
"Rightly or wrongly that ruled out the nation who finished second on
the medal table at London 2012 with 36 gold medals and 102 honours in
total.
"UK Sport set their medal targets prior to the announcement that
Russia would not be taking part in the Paralympics and arguably should
have revised their targets.
"I'm not saying we shouldn't celebrate the achievements of
ParalympicsGB at all - they have been brilliant - but I think a true
measure of success would be whether they can hit 145-150-plus medals."
Hat-trick for Cockroft
Cockroft, who won her third gold medal at the Rio Paralympics, said
she was "stunned" with her performance in the 800m.
"It's ridiculous that, isn't it? I honestly didn't believe I could do
it," said the 24-year-old from Halifax.
"I just thought Kare's on the inside and Alexa Halko's there, I
thought I could sit on the back of them. No-one turned up, and I had to
do it myself. I just kept going. I've never gone that fast on my own.
I'm pretty stunned.
Adenegan, 15, who now has two bronze medals and a silver, added:
"It's amazing. Out of all the events I was nervous about the 800m. It
was an amazing race. I worked hard, kept strong and finished strong.
I've got three medals, I'm so, so happy."
Pearson aggrieved by team decision
Dressage rider Pearson clinched silver in the individual championship
test Grade 1b on Wednesday, but the 42-year-old from Staffordshire was
not part of the team that won gold.
He admitted, after Friday's individual freestyle success, his
disappointment at not being part of the group. Pearson was born with
arthrogryposis multiplex congenita, meaning his limbs were twisted and
have very little muscle.
"I feel like I've never let that team down," said Pearson. "My
results this year meant I should've been on the team.
"It's just three old ladies' decision, but it affects your life, it
affects your sponsors, it affects your confidence.
"Today made me realise I can do it individually."
Pearson scored 77.400% in Friday's final, finishing ahead of
Austria's Pepo Puch, who beat him on Wednesday. The tally of 11 golds
saw the rider draw level with wheelchair racer Baroness Tanni
Grey-Thompson and swimmer David Roberts.
Christiansen, who became the first Briton to win three Paralympic
golds in Rio, paid tribute to veteran Dunham after beating her in the
grade 1a freestyle event.
"I remember when I was 13 and started out in the sport. She was
always this top rider that I thought I would never beat. "It's thanks to
Anne that I'm as good as I am now."
Baker collected her fifth career Paralympic title with gold on mount
Cabral in the grade II freestyle event.
The force is strong with Blake
Blake, who is aiming to add the T36 800m title on Saturday, said he
vomited after winning his first Paralympic gold, the third of his
career.
"I was sick everywhere. I guess it was just the nerves," he said.
"Because I was so late on in the competition and seeing everybody
else do so well, I just wanted to get going and I got a bit
over-excited."
His father Paul played the bounty hunter Greedo in the original Star
Wars film, and Blake added: "He does a few audio books for the BBC and
still does conventions all over the world because there are geeks left,
right and centre that love Star Wars." There was no indication from the
Dorchester-born athlete whether he favoured the Jedi or Dark Side. World
record is icing on GB's cake ParalympicsGB's historic day ended with a
world record in the pool. The quartet of Alice Tai, Claire Cashmore,
Steph Slater and Steph Millward stormed to the 4x100m medley 34 points
title in a world record time of four minutes 45.23 seconds.
The 34 points are made up of the classification numbers of each
swimmer.
Cashmore, 28, who finally won a Paralympic gold on her fourth
attempt, said: "I don't know whether to laugh or cry. That last leg I
was screaming so hard. It was a great team. "
'We had our backsides kicked'
It rained gold, silver and bronze for Great Britain but not on the
basketball court as the women's wheelchair team were thrashed 76-34 by
Netherlands in the bronze-medal match.
Nevertheless, it was best finish for the women's team at the
Paralympics.
"It's a brutal result in our first-ever medal match at the
Paralympics," he said. "We got our backsides kicked and we have to
accept it, absorb it, learn from it and move on from it."
Those who caught the clip of The Last Leg presenter Alex Brooker
talking about his heartfelt admiration for paracylist Alex Zanardi would
have been moved by what they heard.
Italian Zanardi lost portions of both his legs in a Cart championship
accident in 2001 and eventually took up handcycling. Having won two
golds in London 2012, the 49-year-old secured his third Paralympics
title on Thursday and then helped Italy win the mixed team relay on
Friday.
Brooker told the Channel 4 programme on Thursday: "The great thing
about Alex is not that he's a world-class hand-cyclist, but his attitude
to disability is unlike anything I've ever heard before. - BBC
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