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Everything about Paralympic Sports totally explained

Paralympic sport is the umbrella term for a wide range of sports for persons with physical disabilities. While many persons with physical disabilities participate in sports and recreation at various levels, Paralympic sports refers to organized competitive sporting activities as part of the global Paralympic movement. These sports are organized and run under the supervision of the International Paralympic Committee and other international sports federations.

History

Organized sport for persons with physical disabilities developed out of rehabilitation programs. Following the Second World War, in response to the needs of large numbers injured ex-service members and civilians, sport was introduced as a key part of rehabilitation. Sport for rehabilitation grew into recreational sport and then into competitive sport. The pioneer of this approach was Ludwig Guttmann of the Stoke Mandeville Hospital in England. In 1948, while the Olympic Games were being held in London, England, he organized a sports competition for wheelchair athletes at Stoke Mandeville. This was the origin of the Stoke Mandeville Games, which evolved into the modern Paralympic Games.

Organization

No single organization is fully responsible for governing Paralympic sport. Globally, the International Paralympic Committee is recognized as the leading organization, with direct governance of thirteen sports and responsibility over the Paralympic Games and other multi-sport, multi-disability events. Other international organizations, notably the International Wheelchair and Amputee Sports Federation (IWAS), the International Blind Sports Federation (IBSA), and the Cerebral Palsy International Sports and Recreation Association (CP-ISRA) govern some sports that are specific to certain disability groups. In addition, certain single-sport federations govern sports for athletes with a disability, either as part of an able-bodied sports federation such as the International Federation for Equestrian Sports (FEI), or as a disabled sports federation such as the International Wheelchair Basketball Federation.
   At the national level, there are a wide range of organizations that take responsibility for Paralympic sport, including National Paralympic Committees, which are members of the IPC, and many others.

Disability categories

Athletes who participate in Paralympic sport are grouped into six major categories, based on their type of disability:
  • Amputee: Persons with a partial or total amputation of at least one limb.
  • Cerebral palsy: Persons who have a non-progressive neurological disorder resulting from cerebral palsy, traumatic brain injury, or stroke, or similar disabilities affecting muscle control, balance or coordination.
  • Intellectual disability: Persons who have a significant impairment in intellectual functioning with associated limitations in adaptive behaviour. (This category of is currently suspended from international competitions governed by the IPC.)
  • Les autres: From the French for the others, this includes persons with a mobility impairment or other loss of physical function that doesn't fall strictly into one of the other five categories. Participants include those with dwarfism, multiple sclerosis or other disabilities.
  • Visually impaired: Persons who have a non-correctable vision impairment ranging from partially sighted to total blindness.
  • Wheelchair: Persons with a disability that requires them to compete using a wheelchair. This includes most athletes with spinal cord injuries as well as other athletes who require wheelchairs, including some lower limb amputees, persons with polio, and other disabilities. The disability category affects who athletes compete against and which sports they participate in. Some sports are open to multiple disability categories (for example cycling), while others are restricted to only one (for example Five-a-side football). In some sports athletes from multiple categories compete, but only within their category (e.g athletics), while in others athletes from different categories compete against one another (for example swimming).

    Classification

    A major component of Paralympic sport is classification. Classification provides a structure for competition which allows athletes to compete against others with similar disabilities or similar levels of physical function. It is similar in aim to the weight classes or age categories used in some able-bodied sports.
       Athletes are classified through a variety of processes that depend on their disability group and the sport they're participating in. Evaluation may include a physical or medical examination, a technical evaluation of how the athlete performs certain sport-related physical functions, and observation in and out of competition. Each sport has its own specific classification system which forms part of the rules of the sport.

    Paralympic sports

    Current sports

    The following table lists the currently practiced Paralympic sports:
    Sport Categories Governing body Paralympic Games status
    Alpine skiing ALA, CP, VI, WC IPC Winter sport (1976-present)
    Archery ALA, CP, WC IPC Summer sport (1960-present)
    Athletics ALA, CP, ID, VI, WC IPC Summer sport (1960-present)
    Basketball ID ID INAS-FID Summer sport (1996-2000)
    Boccia CP CP-ISRA Summer sport (1984-present)
    Bowls ALA, CP, VI, WC, IPC Summer sport (1968-1988, 1996)
    Cue sports WC IWAS
    Cycling ALA, CP, VI, WC IPC Summer sport (1988-present)
    Equestrian ALA, CP, VI, WC FEI Summer sport (1996-present)
    Football 5-a-Side VI IBSA Summer sport (2004-2008)
    Football 7-a-Side CP CP-ISRA Summer sport (1984-present)
    Goalball VI IBSA Summer sport (1980-present)
    Ice sledge hockey ALA, WC IPC Winter sport (1994-present)
    Ice sledge racing
    Judo VI IBSA Summer sport (1988-present)
    Nine-pin bowling
    Nordic skiing ALA, CP, VI, WC IPC Winter sport (1976-present)
    Powerlifting ALA, CP, WC IPC Summer sport (1964-present)
    Sailing ALA, CP, VI, WC IFDS Summer sport (2000-present)
    Shooting ALA, CP, VI, WC IPC Summer sport (1976-present)
    Paralympic showdown
    Swimming ALA, CP, ID, VI, WC IPC Summer sport (1960-present)
    Table tennis ALA, CP, WC IPC Summer sport (1960-present)
    Ten-pin bowling
    Torball
    Volleyball ALA WOVD Summer sport (1976-present)
    Wheelchair basketball WC IWBF Summer sport (1960-present)
    Wheelchair curling WC ICF Winter sport (2006-present)
    Wheelchair dance sport WC IPC
    Wheelchair fencing WC IWAS Summer sport (1960-present)
    Wheelchair rugby WC IWAS Summer sport (2000-present)
    Wheelchair tennis WC ITF Summer sport (1992-present)

    Abbreviations

  • Categories:
    • ALA - Amputee and les autres
    • CP - Cerebral palsy
    • ID - Intellectual disability
    • VI - Visually impaired
    • WC - Wheelchair
  • Governing bodies:
    ==

    Further Information

    Get more info on 'Paralympic Sports'.


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