Ireland at the Paralympics explained

Npc:IRL
Npcname:Paralympics Ireland
Games:Paralympics
Rank:29
Gold:70
Silver:68
Bronze:95
Appearances:17

A team representing Ireland has competed at every Summer Paralympic Games. The country has never taken part in the Winter Paralympics. Irish athletes have won 233 Summer Paralympic medals. [1] Paralympics Ireland (formerly the Paralympic Council of Ireland) is the National Paralympic Committee.

Northern Ireland-born athletes are entitled to represent either Ireland or Great Britain and Northern Ireland, as they are automatically entitled to the citizenship of both countries. As a result, athletes will tend to represent the National Olympic Committee of the nation to which their sport federation is aligned. The smaller competition pool will also see athletes choose to represent Ireland to ensure greater Olympic qualification chances, although athletes may also move in the opposite direction to increase medal chances, especially in team events. A number of athletes have represented both nations. This is on the same basis as at the Olympics.

At the first Paralympic Games in 1960 in Rome Ireland were one of 23 nations to enter athletes. The team finished 12th in the medals table which to this day remains the highest Ireland has ranked on the medal table. Both of Ireland's gold medals were won by Joan Horan. Horan won her medals in two different sports, one in the women's St. Nicholas Round open archery and one in the women's 25 m Crawl complete class 2 swimming event.[2] [3] [4] At the next games, hosted by Tokyo in 1964, two Irish athletes competed. This remains Ireland's only Summer Paralympics where no medals were earned.

The most medals won by Ireland at a Paralympic Games is 66. This was acheived at the 1984 Games hosted in New York and Stoke Mandeville. 20 of these medals were gold, 15 silver and 31 bronze. These are the most medals ever won at the games, making this the most successful Paralympic Games for Ireland. This was achieved with only 53 athletes on the Paralympic team that year.

The 1996 Summer Paralympics saw the biggest Paralympic team ever head to Atlanta. With 63 athletes competing in these games, Ireland was hoping for their biggest games yet. Dissapointingly for the Irish, 10 medals were won at these games.

At the 2008 Summer Paralympics, held in Beijing, Ireland won five medals in total, three of them gold. There was controversy over the participation of Derek Malone in the 7-a-side cerebral palsy football tournament. Malone, who had competed in the 800 m event at the Athens Paralympics was ruled as ineligible to compete by Games classification authorities on the grounds that his disability was not severe enough.[5] [6]

Athletics is Ireland's highest achieving sport with more than 5x more medals won in Athletics than any other sport. Ireland have also been very successful in swimming with over 30 medals won in the sport.

Medal tables

See also: All-time Paralympic Games medal table.

Medals by Summer Games

GamesAthleteswidth:3em; font-weight:bold;"width:3em; font-weight:bold;"width:3em; font-weight:bold;"TotalRank
2 0 0 2 12
0 0 0 0 18
0 4 5 9 19
2 4 2 8 21
4 10 6 20 21
4 2 11 17 25
2015 31 66 14
13 11 18 42 19
0 3 4 7 47
1 3 6 10 45
5 3 1 9 31
0 3 1 4 61
3 1 1 5 36
8 3 5 16 19
4 4 3 11 28
4 2 1 7 32
- - - - -
future events
Total 70 68 95 233 29

Medals by summer sport

List of medallists

The following table contains all medals won by athletes representing Ireland in the Paralympics. All medals have been won at the Summer Games. Ireland have never had a Paralympic team compete in the Winter Games.

The table is organised in chronological order, then by medal type (Gold, silver and bronze) and then by sport.

This table is a Work in Progress.

Medallists (1960 - 1980)

MedalNameGamesSportEvent
Women's St. Nicholas round open
Women's 25m crawl complete class 2
Rosaleen Gallagher Women's St. Nicholas round cervical
Jimmy Gibson Men's open
Frances O'Sullivan White Women's 25m backstroke class 1
Women's A1 singles
Rosaleen Gallagher Women's Slalom cervical class
Women's 25m backstroke class 1
Women's A2 singles
Rosaleen Gallagher
Frances O'Sullivan White
Table TennisWomen's A2 doubles
Jimmy Gibson Men's C singles
Rosaleen Gallagher Women's 60m wheelchair 1B
Jimmy Gibson
Men's pairs
Kathleen Fagan Women's 60m m2
Rosaleen Gallagher Women's javelin 1B
Jimmy Gibson Men's tournament paraplegic
Ireland TeamWomen's Teams 2
Kathleen Fagan Women's discus throw 2
Frances O'Sullivan White Women's 25m backstroke 1B
Michael Cunningham Men's javelin 4
Rosaleen Gallagher Women's pentathlon 1B
Julia Cosgrove
Frances O'Sullivan White
Women's doubles 1B
Julia Cosgrove Women's singles 1A
Patrick McCool Men's club throw
Patrick McCool Men's discus throw
Clause Stephens Men's discus throw 2
Rosaleen Gallagher Women's 60m 1B
Kathleen Fagan Women's 60m 2
Kathleen Fagan Women's discus throw 2
Rosaleen Gallagher Women's shot put 1B
Christine Doprill Women's shot put 2
Rosaleen Gallagher Women's Slalom 1B
Frances O'Sullivan White Women's singles 1B
Clause Stephens Men's shot put 2
Rosaleen Gallagher Women's club throw 1B
Rosaleen Gallagher Women's discus throw 1B
Christine Doprill Women's discus throw 2
Christine Doprill Women's javelin 2
Kathleen Fagan Women's slalom 2

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: IPC Historical Results Database . . 19 April 2010.
  2. Web site: Ireland's first Paralympic athlete, Oliver Murphy, is honoured at the Renault Ireland Team 2012 Camp . Paralympic Council of Ireland . 14 April 2010 . 19 April 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100426025432/http://www.pcireland.ie/latest.news.php#10_04_12%20oliver . 26 April 2010 .
  3. Web site: Ireland honours pioneering Paralympian . inside world parasport. 15 April 2010 . 19 April 2010.
  4. Web site: name=Joan Horan . Paralympic.org . .
  5. Web site: IPC defend banning of Irish footballer Derek Malone from Paralympic Games . https://archive.today/20120914113522/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/othersports/paralympicsport/2908616/IPC-defend-banning-of-Irish-footballer-Derek-Malone-from-Paralympic-Games-Paralympics.html . dead . 14 September 2012 . Gareth A Davies . . 13 September 2008 . 19 April 2010.
  6. Web site: Games exit for Ireland's Malone . . 11 September 2008 . 19 April 2010.