Sophie Carrigill Explained

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Sophie Carrigill
Club:Leeds Spiders
Coyotes
Birth Date:19 January 1994
Birth Place:Leeds, West Yorkshire
Height:5 ft 8 in
Country:Great Britain
Sport:Wheelchair basketball
Event:Women's team
Disability Class:1.0

Sophie Carrigill (born 19 January 1994) is a 1.0 point British wheelchair basketball player who represented Great Britain at the 2014 Women's World Wheelchair Basketball Championship in Toronto and the 2016 Paralympic Games in Rio de Janeiro.

Biography

Sophie Carrigill was born on 19 January 1994.[1] She attended Wakefield Girls' High School, where she played netball, hockey, and tennis. During a family holiday in the United States in 2010, she was a passenger in a car that crashed into a tree. Despite being the only person in the vehicle wearing a seat belt, she spent two months in hospital, where many of her organs were damaged and some removed including her gall bladder. Her kidney was damaged, and she fractured her T6 thoracic vertebrae,[2] leaving her paralysed from the waist down. She subsequently spent two months in rehabilitation in the spinal unit at Pinderfields Hospital in Wakefield.[3]

Carrigill took up playing wheelchair basketball. Within a year of playing her first game, she was selected to represent the eventual silver medallists Yorkshire in the U19 event at The Lord's Taverners National Junior Championships in 2012. She played for the Leeds Spiders in Divisions 1 and 3 of the BWB National League, and the Coyotes in the Standard Life GB Women's National League. She was chosen to carry the Olympic torch when it passed through Dewsbury in June 2012, received the Harry Mills Team Maker Award at the Youth Sport Trust National Talent Orientation Camp in 2013, and was awarded the ICAP Beckwith Scholarship. That year she took her A-levels in Psychology, Physical Education, and English Language, and entered the University of Worcester, where she studied Sports Psychology.

In April 2013, Carrigill made her international debut in a tournament against the Netherlands.[4] She went on to represent Britain at the European Championships in Frankfurt later the same year, winning bronze, and was captain of the team at the World Wheelchair Basketball Championship in Toronto the following year. She played in the 2015 Women's U25 Wheelchair Basketball World Championship in Beijing,[5] winning gold,[6] and defeated France to take bronze in the 2015 European Championship. In May 2016, she was named as part of the team for the 2016 Summer Paralympics in Rio de Janeiro.[7] The British team produced its best ever performance at the Paralympics, making it all the way to the semi-finals, but lost to the semi-final to the United States, and then the bronze medal match to the Netherlands.[8]

On 29 May 2021, she appeared on I Can See Your Voice with her boyfriend Josh Landmann, another Paralympian.[9]

Achievements

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sophie Carrigill . . 3 July 2015 .
  2. News: Sporty Sophie gets Back Up . . 4 April 2012 . 3 July 2015 .
  3. News: Pinderfields spinal injuries unit inspires runners after treating Olympic hopeful Sophie Carrigill . . 16 February 2014 . 3 July 2015 .
  4. Web site: Sophie makes international debut for GB Wheelchair Basketball Squad . 30 April 2013 . . 3 July 2015 .
  5. Web site: Great Britain Team announced for 2015 Women's U25 World Wheelchair Basketball Championships . . 3 July 2015 .
  6. Web site: Great Britain crowned Women's U25 World Champions! . . 6 July 2015 .
  7. Web site: British women's wheelchair basketball team named for Rio . 13 May 2016 . . 6 September 2016.
  8. News: University of Worcester-based GB women's wheelchair basketball team miss out on bronze medal to dominant Dutch in Rio Paralympics . . Geoff . Berkeley . 17 September 2016 . 18 September 2016 .
  9. News: What's on TV tonight: The Masked Dancer, Cher, Sir Alex, The Queen Mother, and more. The Telegraph . 7 February 2020 . The Daily Telegraph. 29 May 2021.
  10. Web site: Germany earn 10th women's European Wheelchair Basketball Championship title as hosts Britain win men's gold . 6 September 2015 . Inside the Games . 9 September 2015 .
  11. Web site: Summary - Wheelchair Basketball . International Paralympic Committee . 11 February 2017 .
  12. Web site: Sophie Carrigill . British Wheelchair Basketball . 1 September 2018 .
  13. Web site: NED v GBR . FIBA LiveStats . 1 September 2018 .