Greg Smith (Paralympian)

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Greg Smith
File:190411 - Greg Smith - 3b - 2012 Team processing.jpg
2012 Australian Paralympic Team portrait of Smith
Personal information
Full name Gregory Stephen Smith
Nationality Australian
Born (1967-08-19) 19 August 1967 (age 56)
Ballarat, Victoria
Sport
Disability class T51, T52, 2.0 (Wheelchair rugby)

Gregory Stephen "Greg" Smith, OAM[1] (born 19 August 1967) is an Australian Paralympic athlete and wheelchair rugby player who won three gold medals in athletics at the 2000 Summer Paralympics, and a gold medal in wheelchair rugby at the 2012 Summer Paralympics, where he was the flag bearer at the opening ceremony.

Personal

Smith was born on 19 August 1967 in the Victorian city of Ballarat.[2] He broke his neck in a car accident in 1987 while he was a physical training instructor with the Australian Army. The accident left him with little movement from the chest down. He went through one and a half years of gruelling rehabilitation but his life became active again in 1988 after another patient lent him a racing wheelchair.[3]

Athletics career

File:231000 - Athletics wheelchair racing 800m T52 final Greg Smith gold action - 3b - 2000 Sydney race photo.jpg
Action shot of Smith (right)) on his way to winning gold in the 800 m T52 at the 2000 Sydney Paralympics
File:241000 - Athletics wheelchair racing 5km T52 Greg Smith gold medal podium - 3b - 2000 Sydney medal photo.jpg
Smith waves to the crowd as he celebrates his gold medal in the 5000 m T52 at the 2000 Sydney Paralympics

Smith won a gold medal in the men's 4x100 m T1 at the World Championships and Games for the Disabled in Assen, Netherlands.[4] He then began his long Paralympic career with a silver medal in the men's 4x100 m relay TW1–2, and bronze medals in the men's marathon TW2 and the men's 4x400 m relay TW1–2 at the 1992 Barcelona Games. He also competed in the men's 800 m, 1500 m and 5000 m TW2 events.[5] In 1992, he held a scholarship with the Victorian Institute of Sport in athletics.[6] That year, he finished fourth in the 10km road race at the 1992 Oz Day race.[6] In 1995, he was awarded an Australian Institute of Sport Athletes with a Disability non-residential scholarship which he held until 2000.[7]

At the 1996 Atlanta Games, Smith won a silver medal in the men's 5000 m T51. He also competed in the men's 400 m, 1500 m and marathon in T51 events.[5] Smith won three gold medals at the 2000 Sydney Games in the men's 800 m T52, men's 1500 m T52 and men's 5000 m T52 events,[8] for which he received a Medal of the Order of Australia.[1] He also competed in the men's marathon T52.[5] At the 1998 IPC Athletics World Championships in Berlin, he won four gold medals in the men's 800 m, men's 1500 m, men's 5000 m and the men's marathon.[9]

Wheelchair Rugby career

File:210812 - Greg Smith 2012 Flag bearer Australian Paralympic Team - 3b - solo photo.jpg
Smith wraps himself in the Australian Flag outside Cardiff Castle after the announcement that he will be the 2012 Australian Flag Bearer
File:210812 - Greg Smith 2012 Flag bearer Australian Paralympic Team - 3b - ceremony photo.jpg
The ceremony on 21 August where Smith was announced as 2012 Australian Flag Bearer for the Australian Paralympic Team

Smith retired from wheelchair athletics in 2002. After a two-year break, he took up wheelchair rugby socially and at the end of his first season he won the New South Wales State League Most Valuable Player Award and the National League Best New Talent.[10] In 2006, he represented Australia for the first time in wheelchair rugby at the Canada Cup International Tournament. He was a member of the Australian mixed team that won the silver medal in wheelchair rugby at the 2008 Beijing Games . After Beijing, he retired as a player but continued as an assistant coach. He came out of retirement in 2010 and was re-selected to the Australian squad in 2011.[3] He was the Australian flag bearer at the 2012 London Games,[11] and was part of the team that won the gold medal.[12] He retired after the Games but still has an active interest in the sport.[13]

Recognition

References

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  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Results for Greg Smith from the International Paralympic Committee. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
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