Jessica Gallagher
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Jessica Gallagher (born 14 March 1986) is an Australian Paralympic alpine skier, track and field athlete, and tandem cyclist. She was Australia's second female Winter Paralympian, and the first Australian woman to win a medal at the Winter Paralympics at the 2010 Vancouver Games. She competed at the 2014 Winter Paralympics in Sochi, where she won a bronze medal in the Women's Giant Slalom Visually Impaired.[1]
She is legally blind, and represents Australia internationally in three sports: skiing,athletics and cycling. Besides her skiing achievements, she has represented Australia in athletics at the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London, and won a silver and a bronze medal at the 2011 Christchurch IPC Athletics World Championships in long jump and javelin, respectively. She has also represented the state of Victoria as a junior in netball and basketball. Gallagher has been selected in the Australian cycling team with her pilot Madison Janssen for the 2016 Rio Paralympics.[2] Her "long term goal is to be the first Australian to medal at a summer and winter Paralympics or Olympics".[3]
Contents
Personal
Gallagher was born on 14 March 1986 and lives in the Geelong suburb of Highton.[4] In 2009, she graduated from RMIT University with a Master of Osteopathy,[5] and is a registered osteopath.[4][6]
At the time of the 2010 Vancouver Winter Paralympics, she was dating the American Paralympic sitting ski slalomer Gerald Hayden.[7] She is an ambassador for the Australian Paralympic Committee,[8] Vision Australia,[9] Seeing Eye Dogs Australia,[10] Vision 2020 Australia,[11] Kx Pilates[12] and 2XU.[12]
She is legally blind due to Best's disease, a rare condition.[5][13] She started to lose her eyesight when she was a teenager, having received the results of tests while she was competing at the U17 national netball championships.[14]
Gallagher was selected to compete at the 2008 Beijing Paralympics in long jumping, 100 m, shot put and discus, but she failed her classification test because the classifiers said the eyesight in her right eye was 0.01% too good. In November 2009, her classification was revisited due to deterioration of her vision and she was deemed eligible to compete.[13][15] She is aiming to become the first Australian Paralympic competitor to win medals at both the Summer and Winter Paralympics.[16]
Sports
Netball, basketball and snowboarding
She played netball and basketball with able-bodied competitors,[16] having first participated at the elite level in both sports as she started to lose her vision.[17] In netball, she was a goal keeper and goal attack, represented Victoria several times and was named as an emergency for the Australian U16 team. In the Victorian league's Championship Division, she represented both Palladians and Altona Lightning. In basketball, she represented the Geelong Cats for five years and also represented Victoria Country. At that time, her goal was to become a professional netball or basketball player. As well, she played netball in the Geelong Football / Netball League, representing South Barwon and Leopold. Despite her low vision and missing one third of the games due to her Paralympic training program, she won the A grade Best and Fairest Award in 2007, representing Leopold.[citation needed]
Gallagher is also a snowboarder, having taken up the sport while on a working holiday in Vail, Colorado before she found out about the Winter Paralympic Games.[13]
Competitive skiing
Gallagher was the first Australian woman to win a medal at the Winter Paralympics, and Australia's second female Winter Paralympian.[18] She was given the opportunity to compete at the highest levels in skiing after being identified during a talent search and because of her snowboarding experience. As she is blind, she competes with a guide with Eric Bickerton being her first guide.[4] She is coached by Steve Graham,[15] who also coached Michael Milton[19] and is the current head coach of the Australian Institute of Sport's Winter Paralympic program.[20][21] Her Australian training base is at the Victorian Institute of Sport's training centre located at Lakeside Stadium in South Melbourne.[22] While actively training six days a week, her individual training sessions will last between two to three hours each a total of ten to twelve sessions by the end of the week.[23]
Gallagher first represented Australia in 2009 at the New Zealand Winter Games, where she won a gold medal. In January 2010, she competed at her first IPC Alpine Skiing World Cup event in Austria and won a bronze medal in slalom.[4][12] Before the start of the 2010 Games, she had competed in nine World Cup events.[15] On her 24th birthday,[15] she won a bronze medal at the Vancouver games in the Women's Slalom visually impaired event,[24] becoming the first Australian woman to do so.[18] In her first and second time down the hill, she finished third both times,[18][25] She also competed in the Women's Giant Slalom visually impaired event at the 2010 Games,[24] finishing seventh after headset issues that caused problems with communication.[26]
In 2013, at the IPC Alpine Skiing World Cup in Thredbo, New South Wales, several weeks after taking on her new guide, Christian Geiger, she won two silver medals in giant slalom and slalom.[4] At the 2014 Sochi Paralympics, Gallagher (guided by Geiger) won a bronze medal in the Women's Giant Slalom Visually Impaired and came seventh in the Women's Giant Slalom Visually Impaired.[1]
She has been in the Australian Institute of Sport Alpine Skiing Program since 2009.[27]
Australia's National Sports Museum put several items related to her on display after her bronze medal win at the 2010 Vancouver Games.[9]
Competitive athletics
Gallagher is an athletics competitor,[8] competing in long jump, discus, shot put, javelin and sprinting,[16][23] She became involved in athletics after learning about the Paralympics.[14] At the skills assessment, the classifiers had her try shot put and, despite being dressed in casual athletic attire, she managed a throw that met the Paralympic qualifying distance.[14] After a year of training, she increased this initial distance by 2.5 metres (8 ft 2 in) to have a personal best throw of over 12 metres (39 ft).[14] She holds several records in the F13 classification, including Australian and Oceanian records in the long jump, javelin and shot put, and an Australian record in discus.[5] In athletics, her coaches have included Mike Edwards and John Boas. In January 2011, she competed at the 2011 Christchurch IPC Athletics World Championships, where she finished second in the long jump and third in the javelin throw event, with a throw of 33.75 metres (110.7 ft). Her appearance at the championships marked her return to the sport after having taken a break to compete in skiing.[28]
At the 2012 London Paralympics, Gallagher competed in the Women's Long Jump F13 and Women's Javelin Throw F12/13 events, finishing fifth and sixth respectively.[24][29][30] Gallagher was disappointed with these result, having suffered a severe tear in her meniscus during training that forced her to use crutches in the month leading up to the competition.[31]
In a 2014 interview Gallagher expressed what competing at Summer and Winter Paralymics meant to her. She said :I love the unique cultural experience each host city brings. Ultimately, competing for your country on the worlds biggest sporting stage is a pinnacle. It brings memories and experiences that last a lifetime.[32]
Competitive cycling
She was encouraged to take up cycling by Victorian Institute of Sport coach Glenn Doney. The decision to transfer to cycling was made easier after her favorite athletics event the long jump was not included on the 2016 Rio Paralympics athletics program. Gallagher believes that track cycling is easier than downhill skiing. She said ""Being a skier, the guide is not connected to me like on a tandem and so I need to ski at high speeds under incredibly intense variabilities that constantly change. The velodrome is a stable environment." [3] At the 2016 UCI Para-cycling Track World Championships in Montichiari, Italy, Gallagher and her pilot Madison Janssen made their international debut. They won the gold medal in the Women's Sprint B in world record time and the bronze medal in the Women's 1 km Time Trial B.[33][34]
References
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External links
- Official Jessica Gallagher Web Site
- Jessica Gallagher on Twitter
- Jessica Gallagher - Australian Paralympic Committee Profile
- Jessica Gallagher – International Paralympic Committee Alpine Skiing Profile
- Jessica Gallagher – Athletics Australia Results
- Vision Australia Ambassador
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- ↑ 24.0 24.1 24.2 Results for Jessica Gallagher from the International Paralympic Committee. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
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- Paralympic alpine skiers of Australia
- Paralympic athletes of Australia
- Paralympic cyclists of Australia
- Alpine skiers at the 2010 Winter Paralympics
- Alpine skiers at the 2014 Winter Paralympics
- Cyclists at the 2016 Summer Paralympics
- Medalists at the 2010 Winter Paralympics
- Medalists at the 2014 Winter Paralympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 2012 Summer Paralympics
- Paralympic bronze medalists for Australia
- Visually Impaired category Paralympic competitors
- Australian female alpine skiers
- Sportspeople from Geelong
- Sportswomen from Victoria (Australia)
- RMIT University alumni
- Australian netball players
- Australian Institute of Sport Paralympic skiers
- Victorian Institute of Sport alumni
- Australian javelin throwers
- Australian long jumpers
- Female javelin throwers
- Female long jumpers
- Australian female cyclists
- 1986 births
- Living people