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Men's 4 × 100 m Freestyle Relay swim team achieved Australia's 1000th Summer Paralympic Games medal (Australia's 41st of the Games). Jacqueline Freney was the most successful athlete from any nation, winning eight gold medals from eight events while her swimming teammate Matthew Cowdrey became the most successful Australian Paralympian of all ...
Record Athlete Nationality Date Games Place Ref. F11: 40.13 Liangmin Zhang China 1 September 2012 XIV London, United Kingdom [96] F12: 45.06 Liudya Maso Belicer Cuba 19 August 1996 X Atlanta, United States [96] F13: 44.67 Liudya Maso Belicer Cuba 23 October 2000 XI Sydney, Australia [96] F32: Vacant [96] F33: Vacant [96] F34: Vacant [96] F35 ...
Below is an all-time medal table for all Paralympic Games from 1960 to 2024. The International Paralympic Committee does not publish all-time tables, and publishes unofficial tables only per single Games.
Australia won 10 gold, 9 silver and 7 bronze medals. Australian athletes set six world records, a further three Paralympic records and 16 Australian records during the Games. Heath Francis and Evan O'Hanlon won three gold medals. [2] [10] Detailed Australian Results
South Australia [9] Brad Ness: 1 2 0 Wheelchair Basketball 2004, 2008, 2012: Western Australia [9] Andrew Newell: 0 0 2 Athletics 2000: New South Wales [9] Richard Nicholson: 0 2 1 Powerlifting 2000, 2004, 2012 [9] Lynette Nixon: 1 1 1 Cycling 2000 [9] James Nomarhas: 0 1 0 Shooting 1996: New South Wales [9] Shaun Norris: 1 2 0 Wheelchair ...
Australia 11 September 2016: 2016 Games: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil [107] 100 m freestyle: S9: 59.53 WR: Alexa Leary Australia: 4 September 2024: 2024 Games: Paris, France: 100 m freestyle: S10: 58.14 WR: Aurélie Rivard Canada 28 August 2021: 2020 Games: Tokyo, Japan [108] 100 m freestyle: S11: 1:04.88 WR: Daria Lukianenko Neutral Paralympic ...
2011 – APC engaged the University of Queensland and the University of Canberra to write the History of the Paralympic Movement in Australia. This project is part of a larger project within the APC, to capture and archive valuable historical records of Australians at the Paralympics. [42] as the country's first Centre for Paralympic Excellence ...
After Zali Steggall won Australia's first individual medal in the Women's Slalom at the 1998 Winter Olympics, the Olympic Winter Institute of Australia was founded, leading to Australia's first Winter Olympic gold medals at the 2002 Winter Olympics with Steve Bradbury winning the Men's 1000 metres and Alisa Camplin winning the Women's aerials. [7]