PARALYMPICS
Paralympics can ‘change the world’, says Liverpool legend, Jurgen Klopp
BY HARRY DE COSEMO FOR THE IPC
Liverpool former manager, Jurgen Klopp watched his friend Wojtek Czyz compete in Para badminton on day one of Paris 2024. Although New Zealand Para badminton player Wojtek Czyz lost his opening match at the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games, he had a famous friend in the crowd to keep his spirits up; former Liverpool football manager Jurgen Klopp.
Klopp and Czyz go back 23 years, when the 44-year-old, an ex-footballer, had his leg amputated after an accident during a match. Czyz took up Para athletics with Klopp’s support, and qualified for the Paralympics in Athens 2024, before competing at Beijing 2008 and London 2012, winning seven medals and four golds in sprints and the long jump.
He sailed around the world before settling in Hamilton, New Zealand, got into Para badminton and was ultimately named as the country’s sole representative in the SL3 classification in Paris.
Despite Czyz’s loss to British hopeful Daniel Bethell, both he and Klopp were in a jovial mood.
“I couldn’t be prouder of him, to be here again with all the things in between, the start of the dream and being here. I saw his wife Elena and we both had tears in our eyes,” said Klopp
Klopp came to Paris specifically to support his friend, but still managed to get in some sights.
“Yesterday we stood in front of the Eiffel Tower and we both thought ‘wow’. It’s super special,” he said.
Klopp attended popstar Taylor Swift’s concert at Anfield, home of his former club, just weeks after he departed. After watching the remarkable Opening Ceremony at Place de la Concorde, he saw fit to make a comparison.
“What I experienced last night was wonderful. The Opening Ceremony was like a Taylor Swift concert… Outstanding! I saw so many athletes with big smiles in the stands.”
“The stories behind the athletes are always special, and that’s what I love about sport, that it can change the world,” says Klopp, and he boasts that he has told Czyz’s story, ‘over 500 times’.
“I saw his wife Elena, and we both had tears in our eyes. He is constantly doing things I’m not brave enough to do. He told me yesterday how easy it was to dive with sharks.”
Klopp laughed and remarked that he wasn’t ‘going to try it’.
Czyz said Klopp’s presence will help grow Para sport and having him as a vocal ally will help it shine.
“Jurgen is family,” he said. “We made our way; me in the Paralympics and him as a coach. We always stayed close together.
“It has been a long time that he has wanted to come, but he is here to make a statement: the Paralympics and Para sport is amazing. We need people like Jurgen to put the focus on it. That is why I’m very proud of him.
“He said if he could help, he’d be there. It is a great day, despite a tough loss.”
Coming into a new sport, Czyz has experienced something he rarely did in athletics: defeat. But he has learnt from Klopp how to be patient.
“I understand what is happening. It is not that I’m happy; I’m patient, but this is not the result I wanted. But this is what I learnt from Jurgen, you have to keep going.”
Call for increased support
Klopp wants awareness and understanding of the Paralympic movement and insists it cannot just be in focus every four years.
“I think we are all ready to see more than is shown,” he said. “I was watching last night and the people who are here all the time do what they can, maybe it for us who are not always there to support it a lot more.
“The Paralympics is for all. I saw people in the crowd yesterday (at the Opening Ceremony) with disabilities and it means the world to them. A story is about ups and downs, we all want a happy ending. To show all these happy endings is the best example.”
Czyz is embarking on a new journey in Para badminton, but with the support of his friends, not least Klopp himself, he’s hoping for future success.
PARALYMPICS
Paris gives Paralympic Games a send-off for the ages
Stade de France transformed into huge electronica dance party with world’s elite para athletes doing farewell conga
With an explosion of fireworks, laser beams, breakdance and a thumping set by the giants of French electronica, France bid goodbye to the Paralympic Games on Sunday night with the biggest party it had ever thrown.
The feelgood summer of athletic achievement in Paris had turned crowds hoarse from so much cheering and for ever changed the nation’s attitude to sport and disability, and now Parisians were desperately sad to say goodbye to it all.
But France wanted one last frenzied night of celebration and the Stade de France stadium in Saint-Denis was transformed into a massive electronica dance party with some of the world’s top elite para athletes doing the conga around the stadium on an athletics track where days before records were being broken.
The Paris Games organisers said they wanted the Paralympics closing ceremony to “show we know how to party” – as if anyone still had any doubt that the French capital liked letting its hair down.
Jean-Michel Jarre, France’s godfather of synthesisers and stadium laser shows, headed a riotous showcase of France electro dance amid flashing light-shows, hundreds of crisscrossing laser beams and walls of flames on stage.
The “French Touch” extravaganza culminated in the star DJ Martin Solveig playing Daft Punk’s One More Time amid a stage full of dancing para athletes, giant mascots bobbing in sequin skirts and a volley of hundreds of fireworks.
Earlier, the French Republican Guard military band had blasted out Gloria Gaynor’s I Will Survive as para athletes paraded with their countries’ flags.
In a nod to its controversial decision to introduce breakdance to the Olympics, Paris also signed off with a staggering breakdance performance by many disabled dancers that drew gasps from the para athletes watching.
The big surprise of the night – and one of the best musical performances – was the blind Malian singers Amadou and Mariam performing a stunning rendition of Serge Gainsbourg’s anthem about goodbyes, Je Suis Venu te Dire que Je M’en Vais, at the base of the ballon-borne Paralympic flame, just as it was extinguished.
Another spine-tingling moment was a new take on the French national anthem. Of all the many versions of La Marseillaise played since the Olympic Games began in July, Sunday night’s was for sure the most moving: a solo, musical rendition by the acclaimed disabled French trumpeter André Feydy.
“The most spectacular Paralympic Games ever,” said Andrew Parsons, president of the International Paralympic Committee, in conclusion to 12 heady days in Paris which saw China top the medals table, with Great Britain second and the US in third place, just as Los Angeles takes over the Olympic and Paralympic Games for 2028.
With more competing countries than ever before, a record 169 delegations, more women and more global coverage, Paris 2024 had set a new benchmark for the Paralympic Games, said Parsons. He thanked French crowds for their huge turnout and roof-raising support. “For a country famous for its fashion and food, France is now famous for its fans,” he said, to raucous screams from more than 60,000 spectators at the Stade de France.
Now it was time that “appreciation and applause must be followed by acceptance and action”, he said. It was time to break down barriers in society outside the playing field – from education to employment, government and entertainment.
For French organisers, the celebration was all the merrier given the final figures on tickets. Paris 2024 sold a record 12m tickets for the Olympics and Paralympics combined, beating the Games record previously set by London 2012.
This included 9.5m tickets sold for the Paris Olympics and 2.5m for the Paris Paralympics. In 2012, London organisers had set the record for the Paralympics, with 2.7m tickets sold, but only 8.2m were sold for the Olympics.
In keeping with the torrential downpour of rain that soaked the Olympics opening ceremony along the River Seine back in July, the skies opened for the end of the Paralympics, utterly drenching the athletes who valiantly danced to the music as flames warmed the occasion by constantly bursting into the sky from the stage.
The Guardian, UK
PARALYMPICS
‘Nigeria We Hail Thee’ rendered for the first time on the podium at global sports fiesta
‘Nigeria we hail thee’, the new old anthem is rendered for the first time on the podium of a global sports fiesta – Paris 2024 Paralympics.
Great thanks to Onyinyechi Mark who apart from leading a pack of women iin the 61kg power-lifting, she set a new record in her gold medal lift.
It means that ‘Nigeria We Hail Thee’ will be rendered on the podium. This is the first time this will happen in the frame work of a global event apart from the sectional Commonwealth Games.
‘Nigeria We Hail Thee’ was initially the Nigeria national anthem from October 1, 1960 to the same date in 1978. It was readopted later this year.
In the first period it was used, Nigeria featured at the Olympic Games at Rome 1960, Tokyo 1964, Mexico 1960 and Munich 1972 as Montreal 1976 was boycotted.
At the period, Nigeria did not win any gold medal that would have necessitated the rendering of ‘Nigeria We Hail Thee’ on the podium.
When Nigeria first won gold medals at the Barcelona ‘92 Paralympics and then at the Atlanta ‘96 Olympics. At the time, the Nigerian National anthem was ‘Arise O Compatriot’ which was dropped earlier this year.
PARALYMPICS
At last, gold for Nigeria at Paris 2024!
Onyinyechi Mark has made history at the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games by setting a new world record in the Women’s 61kg powerlifting event.
She lifted an impressive 150kg, securing Nigeria’s first gold medal at the Games. It is Nigeria’s first gold medal since the Paris 2024 Olympics and Paralymoics.
Already the world record holder, Mark broke her record twice during the competition.
She surpassed her previous Paralympic Games and World records of 145kg and 146kg with lifts of 147kg and 150kg, respectively.
Her final lift of 150kg, achieved amidst applause from the spectators, set both a new world and a Paralympics record.
China’s Jianjin Ciu took the silver medal with a 140kg lift, while Mexico’s Amalia Vazquez Perez claimed the bronze with a 130kg lift
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