Sammi Kinghorn won World Championship gold over 100m in Paris last year

Paris Para-Olympics: BBC Celebrates “Non-Chinese” Victory! (6.9.2024)

“Kinghorn is the first non-Chinese athlete to win the Paralympic T53 100m since Briton Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson triumphed in Athens in 2004.” BBC – 4.9.2024

Bologger’s Note: I suspect the BBC Editor’s will quietly “alter” this article once the blatantly “racist” nature of its discourse becomes more widely known. Therefore, I have quoted the offending section in full just in case it is “disappeared” in a typical New Labour manner. The BBC “celebrates” that the “Chinese” Para-Olympic Athlete – Gao Gang (高芳) – was defeated, not as an opposing sportsperson, but simply because she happens to be “Chinese”! The reality is that the capitalist West does not value people with disability – as their minds and bodies are considered “unexploitable” from a typical commercial perspective – or if exploitable, to a far lesser degree then a person considered “able”, and so on. This is why the capitalists have referred to disabled people as being “Invalids” – that is a “person without validity”. Nothing has changed in essence – despite much appearing to change on the surface. I fully support all people with disabilities – including Sammi Kinghorn (what an achievement) – but I do not accept BBC racism disguised as sporting commentary. Furthermore, people with disabilities are stronger joining together in an “Internationalist” collective – rather than separating into competing camps of Bourgeois spite, pettiness, and reaction. Socialist China values people with disabilities – the capitalist West does not – and this is demonstrated through the PRC’s total domination of the Medal Table at the Paris Para-Olympics! ACW (6.9.2024)

Kinghorn’s ‘mind blown’ by first Paralympic gold

Alan Jewell

BBC Sport at Stade de France

  • Published4 September 2024

Sammi Kinghorn said it was “absolutely blowing my mind” to have won a first Paralympic gold medal, after taking victory in the T53 100m in Paris.

The 28-year-old Briton came home in a Paralympic record 15.64 seconds at Stade de France, edging out Catherine Debrunner.

It comes after Kinghorn took two silvers over 800m and 1500m earlier in the Games, losing out to the Swiss on both occasions.

She now has five Paralympic medals overall, having won a bronze and silver in Tokyo three years ago.

Debrunner, who has also won gold over 5000m in Paris, got the silver in 15.77 with Gao Fang, the champion in Tokyo, taking bronze in 16.61.

“I just can’t believe that I’ve done that,” Kinghorn said.

“I didn’t want to celebrate too early. I just wanted to definitely make sure that my name was at the top of that screen so it took a little moment to actually compose myself and go, ‘Oh my gosh, I’ve actually just done that.’”

Kinghorn is the first non-Chinese athlete to win the Paralympic T53 100m since Briton Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson triumphed in Athens in 2004.

The Scot and Debrunner will line up against each other again on Thursday over 400m.

Britain have so far won seven medals in Para-athletics in Paris, with Kinghorn providing three of them.

Sammi Kinghorn said it was “absolutely blowing my mind” to have won a first Paralympic gold medal, after taking victory in the T53 100m in Paris.

How Kinghorn ‘accepted the new me’ after accident

Silver Sammi is no more.

“Gosh, it’d be amazing to win a gold medal,” she told the BBC on Tuesday, after coming second in the 1500m. She did not have to wait long to experience that feeling.

The gusto with which she rang the victory bell in the Stade de France was a clue to just how exciting and emotional it was to upgrade her medal collection.

“I sobbed the whole way round my victory lap, just sobbed the whole time,” she said.

“Tokyo was my first Paralympic medals but with nobody in the stands and that for me was pretty heartbreaking. I’ve got 29 people out there with posters of my face. To do it in front of all them is so incredibly special because although it’s an individual sport I have a huge team besides me.”

Kinghorn was 14 when she broke her back in an accident on her family’s farm in 2010, snow and ice falling from a roof and crushing her.

She spent six months at the Southern General Hospital in Glasgow before being told she would never walk again.

“When I had my accident, my body was torn down to nothing. I rebuilt it in training and that was something that helped me accept this new me,” she said.

“My physio at the spinal unit in Glasgow, without her I would not be here now. She saw something in me. I always loved sport before my accident and she got me into trying lots of different sports.

“I went down to try wheelchair racing and Ian Thompson, Tanni-Grey Thompson’s husband, said to me ‘Oh, you could be good at this.’ Straight away that was a switch. Something quite traumatic had just happened to me and I didn’t know if I was ever going to be good at anything ever again. I remember thinking ‘OK, great, that’s what I’m going to do.'”

Kinghorn’s first Paralympic gold follows three world titles, the most recent over 100m in Paris last year when she also got the better of Debrunner.

There could be more medals in Paris for both of them. After the 400m on Thursday, Kinghorn has the 4x100m universal relay on Friday while, incredibly, Debrunner will contest the marathon on Sunday.

BBC Articles:

https://www.bbc.com/sport/athletics/articles/c5y3zkrpdgko