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Tears of joy for Team Ireland with four medals in one day
Tears of joy for Team Ireland with four medals in one day
For Ireland’s
Paralympians, this was the day of days – two gold medals, one silver,
one bronze, and enough euphoric tears to flood the sun-baked streets of
Rio, writes Cathal Dennehy.
In the Olympic park, Ireland
won its first swimming medal of the Paralympics through Ellen Keane, who
finished third in the final of the SB8 100m breaststroke final.
The 21-year-old from Clontarf clocked 1:23.07 in a race won by Canada’s Katarina Roxon in 1:19:44. Ellen Keane celebrates after finishing 3rd in the Women's 100m Breaststroke SB8 Final in Rio. Photo by Paul Mohan/SportsfileHaving
reached three finals back in London 2012, but been able to finish no
higher than fifth, Keane was understandably overrun with emotion in the
aftermath.
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"I
finished, looked up, saw the three beside my name and was just freaking
out,” said Keane. “Within the last 25 metres I just kept telling
myself: 'keep long and strong, don't panic.' There was so little between
the top four, so I'm so glad I didn't come fourth." Ireland's
Katie-George Dunlevy, centre, with her pilot Eve McCrystal, after
winning gold in the Women's B Time Trial, along with fellow Team Ireland
gold-medalist Eoghan Clifford who won the Men's C3 Time Trial. Photo by
Diarmuid Greene/SportsfileIt was at
Pontal, on the Southern coast, where Team Ireland made the biggest
splash – Galway cyclist Eoghan Clifford shrugging off a knee injury to
obliterate the field in the C3 men’s time trial, coming home in
38:21.79, 69 seconds clear of silver medallist Masaki Jita of Japan.
His
supremacy was so pronounced that it could be mistaken for having been
routine, but Clifford was quick to note afterwards that that was not the
case.
“Cyclists will always suffer,” he said. “It’s a sport
where you suffer a lot, but I suffered more because of the injury. I was
a bit angry today, not happy with the result earlier in the week. I
wanted to prove I could do this.”
Clifford, who competes in the C3 category due to having a
degenerative muscle disease, had struggled badly with a knee injury on
the build-up, revealing afterwards that he had been in constant pain for
days, even on recovery easy recovery spins.
“I had a rant at my
coach,” said Clifford. “I told him I wanted to throw the bike into the
sea and luckily he stopped me. I was always going to make the start
line.”
As Clifford was explaining the challenges he faced en route
to gold, he stopped mid-sentence, craning his neck to catch sight of
the Irish women’s B tandem pair, Eve McCrystal and Katie-George Dunlevy,
who at that very moment were emulating him out on the course.
Their finishing time of 38:59.22 left them a whopping 33
seconds clear of silver medallists Japan, and sent a wave of emotion
washing over them as they reflected on becoming Paralympic gold
medallists. “We’ve been waiting to hear that for the last four years,”
said Dunlevy.
Tandem pilot McCrystal knew if they avoided
accidents, none of their 16 rival teams could match their ability. “We
have the power so we wanted to do it on a course like this.”
McCrystal
revealed that she felt ill in the days beforehand, but thoughts of that
were put to the back of her mind as she joined Dunlevy on the ramp. “I
told her: ‘we’re going to win it,’” she said.
Earlier in the day, Colin Lynch fell narrowly short of the
same achievement when winning silver in the men’s C2 time trial,
clocking 28:02.25 behind Canada’s Tristen Chernove. To him, however, it
felt like gold.
“This is something I’ve been working at for four years and it’s an absolute dream,” he said.
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