Egypt at the 2000 Summer Paralympics

Egypt at the
2000 Summer Paralympics
IPC code EGY
NPC Egyptian Paralympic Committee
in Sydney
Medals
Ranked 23rd
Gold Silver Bronze Total
6 11 11 28
Summer Paralympics appearances

Egypt sent a delegation to compete at the 2000 Summer Paralympics in Sydney, Australia. Egyptian athletes won six gold medals, eleven silver and eleven bronze, enabling their country to finish 23rd out of 123 on the medal table. Athletics and powerlifting were equally successful, with each sport giving 3 gold medals each to Egypt.

Background

The Egyptian team included 45 sportspeople, 12 women and 33 men. This was 7 more women than the country had sent to Atlanta for the 1996 Games.[1] The team included athletes Mahmoud El-Attar, El-Sayed Moussa, Hani El-Behairy, Ibrahim Allam, Ali Ibrahim, Hossam Abdel-Latif, Ahmed Hassan, Karima Feleifal and Zakia Abdeen, and powerlifters Metwally Mat'hana, Ussama El-Sergani, Ahmed Gomaa, Shaaban Ibrahim, Sayed Abdel-Al, Mustafa Hamed, Abdel-Moneim Farag, Sherif Bakr and Fatma Omar.[2]

General Union of Sports Clubs for the Disabled had served as Egypt's NPC since 1982. In 1998, two years before the Sydney Games, it was replaced by the Egyptian Disabled Sports Federation as a result of President of the Council of Ministers Order No. (659).[3]

Medals

Egypt finished the Sydney hosted Games with 28 totals medals, 6 gold, 12 silver and 10 bronze, enabling their country to finish 23rd out of 123 on the medal table.[4][5]

Egypt's medalists included:

Athletics

Egypt won three gold medals, six silver and seven bronze in athletics.[2] Egyptian athletes competed at the 1999 Disabled Sports USA DS/USA's National Summer Games as part of their preparation efforts for the 2000 Games.[6]

Powerlifting

Egypt won three gold medals, five silver and four bronze, dropping from first place in Atlanta to third in Sydney, behind China and Nigeria.[3]

Metwalli Mathana made his second Paralympic appearance at these Games.[4] Fatma Omar made her Paralympic debut in Sydney, winning her first gold medal in powerlifting at the Games in the -44 kg class.[4][7] Ahmed Gomaa Mohamed Ahmed participated in his third Games in Sydney. Mohamed Ahmed took up the sport in 1984, and decided to compete internationally because he was able to lift more than his able-bodied counterparts in Egypt. In the period around these Games, he was training five days a week, three hours a day. He was getting funding from the Egyptian Paralympic Committee to allow him to train full time. In Sydney, he repeated his performance from Atlanta, winning gold and setting a world recor in the men's -56 kg class.[8] Osama Elserngawy won silver in the Men's 52 kg event.[7]

See also

References

  1. LAUFF, JACKIE (2007). "DEVELOPING COUNTRY PARTICIPATION IN INTERNATIONAL DISABILITY SPORT COMPETITION: A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE" (PDF). Masters Thesis.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 "Guts and Glory", Egypt Today, August 2008
  3. 1 2 "DISABLED SPORTS POWERLIFTING CHALLENGES, ACHIEVEMENTS AND FUTURE VISION IN EGYPT". Retrieved 2016-10-25.
  4. 1 2 3 "On to the Paralympics". Al-Ahram Weekly (1311). September 8, 2016. Retrieved October 25, 2016.
  5. "A promise is a promise", Al-Ahram weekly, November 2, 2000
  6. Evans, Elizabeth. "Springfield College plays host to two summer national championships." Palaestra Fall 1997: 36+. Academic OneFile. Web. 26 Oct. 2016.
  7. 1 2 "Offcial Website of the Chinese Olympic Committee". en.olympic.cn. Retrieved 2016-10-26.
  8. "Meet Ahmed, Multi Gold Medal Winner and Paralympic Record Holder - Популярные статьи - Библиотека международной спортивной информации". bmsi.ru. Retrieved 2016-10-26.
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