Chelsea mcclammer paralympics medal table
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It's pretty phenomenal."
Chelsea McClammer
Sport: Para Track and Field
Gold: 0 Silver: 2 Bronze: 1
Quick Facts
Birthday: March 1, 1994
Height: 5'5"
Age: 31
Hometown: Richland, WA
Education: University of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign
Biography
Quick Facts
- Daughter of Rebecca Bowie and Charles McClammer
- Grew up playing basketball, tennis and track
- Incurred a spinal injury after a car accident at the age of six
- At 14 years old she went on to become the youngest member of the Paralympic U.S.
Track and Field team at Beijing 2008 after joining the national team two years prior
- Her dream is to move back to Seattle and work at the hospital she went through rehab at after her accident, Seattle Children’s Hospital, to be a children’s rehab counselor.
Paralympic Experience
- 3-time Paralympian; 3-time Paralympic medalist (2 silver, 1 bronze)
- Paralympic Games Tokyo 2020, 6th (800m T53 - Women), 7th (400m T53 - Women)
- Paralympic Games Rio de Janeiro 2016, (4 x 400m Relay T53-54 - Women, Marathon T54 - Women), silver (400m T53 - Women, 5000m T54 - Women), bronze (1500m T54 - Women), 5th (800m T53 - Women)
- Paralympic Games Beijing 2008, 8th (800m T54 - Women)
World Championship Experience
- Most recent: 2019 – 5th (400m T53 - Women), 6th (800m T53 - Women), 8th (1500m T54 - Women, 5000m T54 - Women)
- Years of participation: 1500m T54 - Women 2015, 2017, 2019; 400m T53 - Women 2013, 2015, 2017, 2019; 5000m T54 - Women 2015, 2017, 2019; 800m T53 - Women 2013, 2015, 2017, 2019; Marathon T53/54 - Women 2015; 100m T53 - Women 2013; 200m T53 - Women 2011, 2013
- Medals: 5 (1 silver, 4 bronze)
- Silver – 2017 (400m T53 - Women)
- Bronze – 2017 (5000m T54 - Women, 800m T53 - Women); 2015 (5000m T54 - Women); 2013 (200m T53 - Women)
Chelsea McClammer (left), Tatyana McFadden (center), and Amanda McGrory (right) celebrate a U.S.
sweep at the Rio 2016 Paralympic Games.
U.S.
Rigo, of Cheney, also became a young star when he was selected as the youngest member of Team USA for the 2013 International Paralympic Committee World Championships at age 14. It's very fun. I play basketball on the team here, so it's very much different.
New Vision High students explore adaptive sports with Paralympic champs
POST FALLS — New Vision High School students gained a new perspective Wednesday afternoon during an exercise in empathy and Paralympic spirit.
For many, it was their first time sitting in a wheelchair.
Wheelchair basketball can be a conversation starter, he said.
"It's a good catalyst for them to be a little more social with people with disabilities, which is a win for everybody," Rigo said. Paralympics Track & Field National Records
Current American, Americas and world records for men's and women's events are available in the forms below:
If there is a discrepancy in the National Records please click here to fill out our records discrepancy form.
World Records
World Records can only be set at WPA approved competitions in which a doping control officer is set up in advance. There is no on call testing allowed for World Record validations. If you are close to breaking a World Record in a Paralympic Games event for your classification please reach out to us at [email protected] at least 4 weeks in advance of your approved competition to discuss options. World Records can always be set at Grand Prix competitions, National Championships and U.S.
Paralympics Trials competitions.
Click here for Americas Regional & World Records on the World Para Athletics website.
If a World Para Athletics (WPA) record is set, all forms and supplemental documentation must be submitted to Tanner at [email protected] within 24 hours of the record.
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ParaSport Spokane uses adaptive sports as a catalyst for life.McClammer, of Airway Heights, won two silver medals and one bronze medal at the 2016 Summer Paralympics. He said he also hopes that as they are out and about and meet people with disabilities, this experience will give them a connection. He came in seventh when he competed in the Paralympic Games in Tokyo in 2020: 100-meter T52 — Men, 1,500-meter T52 — Men and 400-meter T52 - Men.
He said he hoped the New Vision students had fun as they became more aware of sports that are available for people with disabilities.
"To do something you've never done before is really hard in middle school and high school.
Executive Director Skinner said it was impressive to see the way New Vision students got out of their comfort zones.
"It says a lot about the school, about the teachers and a lot about the culture that's here that embraces that bravery," Skinner said.
"Out of anything, this has got to require more skill than actual basketball itself."
New Vision senior Zabre Terrell-Williams said she had been in a regular wheelchair before, but the basketball wheelchair was a new experience.
"Nothing can stop you, not even disabilities," she said. I'm just so impressed with the respect they've shown for our athletes, for the equipment and the respect for the experience.
She became the youngest member of Team USA when she competed in the 2008 Summer Paralympics in Beijing at 14 years old.
"I'm the youngest in history for track and field," she said.
She said it was really cool to see the New Vision students experiencing wheelchair sports.
"I wish my high school did it, so it means a lot that they're even giving it a shot and getting out there," she said.
If one of their schoolmates struggled during the relays, they chanted their names and cheered them on.
"It's new," senior Chris Benboe said. "My four years going here this was our first time doing this.
The students rolled through the court of the Post Falls Boys and Girls Club Jordan Johnson Clubhouse, experimenting with forward and backward motion, fast turnarounds and friendly games of basketball.
I'm used to dribbling, but then you can't really dribble so you adapt a lot."
He said he enjoyed the collective experience as he and his classmates took to a new mode of mobility.
"We're more of a family, so instead of everybody walking around, we're in wheelchairs," he said. "This is why we do these things so, one, they feel comfortable around people with disabilities — we're not going to bite, we don't have a disease, we won't infect you — so it opens that door, which is fantastic."
ParaSport Spokane is a nonprofit that provides training and recreational opportunities for youth and adults with physical disabilities that promote success, self-worth and independence.
For all, it was an adventure in mobility as they worked under the direction of ParaSport Spokane founder Theresa Skinner and with the guidance of Paralympic champions Isaiah Rigo and Chelsea McClammer to explore adaptive sports.
"It's not as easy as it looks," sophomore Scarlet Haines said as she and her schoolmates were tasked with sprinting and dribbling in specialized basketball wheelchairs.
"Honestly, this is really impressive that people can do this so well," she said.