Sport
  • Login
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Reel
  • Future
  • Culture
  • More
    • Music
Tuesday, December 16, 2025
No Result
View All Result

SPORT

7 °c
London
8 ° Thu
11 ° Fri
13 ° Sat
14 ° Sun
  • Home
  • Football
  • Formula1
  • Cricket
  • Rugby U
  • Tennis
  • Video
  • Golf
  • Boxing
  • Basketball
  • Cycling
  • World Sport
    • All
    • African Football
    • European Football
    • Sport Africa

    Real Madrid’s Thibaut Courtois asks fans to stop abuse of players after Vinicius Jr again targeted

    Afcon 2025: Benin ready to compete after World Cup qualifying heartbreak

    Jamie Vardy: Cremonese striker is Serie A player of the month

    Liverpool ‘united as one’ after Mohamed Salah return, says Virgil van Dijk

    Marcus Rashford says he finds nothing ‘a pressure’ at Barcelona

    Mohamed Salah: Questions still remain as Liverpool forward heads off to Africa Cup of Nations

    Scotland's Burke scores stunner as Union beat RB Leipzig

    World Cup ticket prices: Fans tell of ‘anger and disappointment’ at cost

    Football Daily – Euro Leagues: Alonso’s future, Pogba’s camels, ‘panic’ in Turkey and a bonkers Polish season

All Sport
  • Home
  • Football
  • Formula1
  • Cricket
  • Rugby U
  • Tennis
  • Video
  • Golf
  • Boxing
  • Basketball
  • Cycling
  • World Sport
    • All
    • African Football
    • European Football
    • Sport Africa

    Real Madrid’s Thibaut Courtois asks fans to stop abuse of players after Vinicius Jr again targeted

    Afcon 2025: Benin ready to compete after World Cup qualifying heartbreak

    Jamie Vardy: Cremonese striker is Serie A player of the month

    Liverpool ‘united as one’ after Mohamed Salah return, says Virgil van Dijk

    Marcus Rashford says he finds nothing ‘a pressure’ at Barcelona

    Mohamed Salah: Questions still remain as Liverpool forward heads off to Africa Cup of Nations

    Scotland's Burke scores stunner as Union beat RB Leipzig

    World Cup ticket prices: Fans tell of ‘anger and disappointment’ at cost

    Football Daily – Euro Leagues: Alonso’s future, Pogba’s camels, ‘panic’ in Turkey and a bonkers Polish season

No Result
View All Result

SPORT

No Result
View All Result
Home Athletics

Jason Smyth: Six-time Paralympic champion retires aged 35

April 6, 2023
in Athletics
4 min read
209 15
0
477
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Jason Smyth, Paralympic sport’s fastest man until 2021, has announced his retirement at the age of 35.

The Ireland sprinter earned six Paralympic titles, which included 100m and 200m doubles at the Beijing and London Games in 2008 and 2012.

Visually-impaired Smyth stayed unbeaten during a Paralympic career which began at the 2005 European Championships.

His final Paralympic triumph saw him hold off Algeria’s Skander Djamil Athmani in the T13 100m in Tokyo.

That was the Northern Irishman’s 21st major title of a Paralympic career, which also included nine world titles and six European gold medals, and he remains the fastest-ever sprinter in his classification.

He has now taken up a new role with Paralympics Ireland which will see him work as strategy manager with the organisation.

Smyth enjoyed the status of being the world’s outright fastest Paralympian from 2012 until the Tokyo Paralympics in 2021, when his 100m time of 10.46, set in the T13 class, was beaten by 0.03 of a second by T12 runner Salum Ageze Kashafali.

County Londonderry’s Smyth had perfect vision up until the age of nine before a hereditary condition known as Stargardt’s Disease began to cause his sight to deteriorate.

His athletics talent was developed by current UK Athletics technical director Stephen Maguire, who initially coached Smyth to an Irish Schools title before learning the full extent of his disability.

Smyth’s talent was developed by current UK Athletics technical director Stephen Maguire

The Strabane man realised Smyth might be eligible for Paralympic competition and by the following summer he was a double European Paralympic champion, those performances qualifying Smyth for the maximum 40,000 Euros Irish Sports Council grant.

In addition to starring on the Paralympic stage, Smyth’s 100m personal best of 10.22 seconds saw him compete alongside Usain Bolt and the planet’s other greatest able-bodied sprinters at the 2011 World Championships in Daegu, South Korea.

Smyth had become the first Paralympic athlete to compete at a European Championships when he reached the 100m semi-finals in Barcelona in 2010 and had high hopes of representing Ireland at both the Paralympics and Olympic Games at London 2012.

His 100m personal best from 2011 was an agonising 0.04 seconds outside the Olympic standard but he regrouped from that disappointment in spectacular style as he defended his Paralympic titles in London.

World records at London Paralympics

In the 100m final in the Olympic Stadium, Smyth improved his own T13 100m world record to 10.46 seconds and he produced an even more impressive performance in the 200m as he lowered his existing global mark to 21.05 seconds – 0.11 slower than his fastest performance in able-bodied competition in the longer sprint.

Those two times remained his fastest performance in Paralympic competition but the titles continued to roll in for the Eglinton native over the next nine years – despite often battling against injury.

Smyth’s hopes of a third successive Paralympic sprint double were dashed by the International Paralympic Committee’s decision to remove the T13 200m from the programme at the Rio Games in 2016.

However, Smyth, who two years earlier had represented Northern Ireland at the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, comfortably retained the 100m title as he clocked 10.64 seconds to finish 0.14 ahead of Namibia’s Johannes Nambala.

It was altogether closer at the Tokyo Games in August 2021 which had been delayed for a year by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Smyth’s prized unbeaten record in Paralympic competition looked under major threat from emerging Algerian Athmani but a superb start from the Irishman gave him an early advantage in the final and his perfectly-judged dip at the finishing line helped him hold off the north African by the tightest of margins – 0.01 seconds.

Following his Tokyo triumph, Smyth said that he would consider prolonging his Paralympic career until Paris 2024 but some 17 months before those Games, he has opted to bring the curtain down on his competitive days.

Smyth’s retirement closes a glorious Paralympic athletics chapter for both Irish and Northern Ireland sport following his great friend Michael McKillop’s exit from the sport after the Tokyo Games.

Like Smyth, McKillop secured double gold for Ireland at London 2012 after winning his first Paralympic title in Beijing four years ago and went on to clinch another triumph at the Rio Games.

Despite his astonishing run of success, Smyth often spoke of his frustration at how the media interest would invariably quickly fade following his return home.

In the run-up to the delayed Tokyo Games, he also said he doubted there were obvious successors to Northern Ireland’s golden generation of Paralympians which also included swimmer Bethany Firth, skier Kelly Gallagher as well as his fellow athlete McKillop.

With Smyth now retired, Firth is the only member of that quartet who remains in competition.



Source link

Previous Post

Romelu Lukaku: Juventus handed one-match partial stadium closure after fans racially abused Inter Milan striker

Next Post

Women’s Six Nations: ‘If he can go through chemo, I can play 80 minutes’ – Wales’ Natalia John

Next Post

Women's Six Nations: 'If he can go through chemo, I can play 80 minutes' - Wales' Natalia John

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Great Britain 81-84 South Sudan: Hosts defeated at Copper Box Arena

    477 shares
    Share 191 Tweet 119
  • Guernsey beat Denmark to win 2026 ICC T20 World Cup qualifier

    477 shares
    Share 191 Tweet 119
  • Wales rugby launch new dual kit after squad feedback on period anxiety

    477 shares
    Share 191 Tweet 119
  • LIV Golf Greenbrier: Brooks Koepka beats Jon Rahm in a play-off to win fifth LIV Golf title

    477 shares
    Share 191 Tweet 119
  • French Open 2025 results: Aryna Sabalenka beats Zheng Qinwen to set up semi-final against Iga Swiatek or Elina Svitolina

    477 shares
    Share 191 Tweet 119
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Tokyo Olympics: GB win gold in the 4x100m mixed medley relay in world record time

July 31, 2021

Fastest violinist in the world – BBC News

July 27, 2021

Tokyo Olympics: USA easily beat Iran to bounce back from opening-game defeat

July 30, 2021

Tokyo Olympics: Novak Djokovic thrashes Kei Nishikori to reach men’s semi-finals

July 30, 2021

NFL results & pick of week 15: Why the Chiefs missed play-offs & Micah Parsons injury worry for Packers

December 16, 2025

Kate O’Connor: Irish heptathlete ‘never could have imagined’ her remarkable breakthrough year

December 16, 2025

Real Madrid’s Thibaut Courtois asks fans to stop abuse of players after Vinicius Jr again targeted

December 16, 2025

Afcon 2025: Benin ready to compete after World Cup qualifying heartbreak

December 16, 2025

Categories

  • African Football
  • American Football
  • Athletics
  • Basketball
  • Boxing
  • Cricket
  • Cycling
  • European Football
  • Football
  • Formula1
  • Golf
  • Rugby U
  • Sport Africa
  • Swimming
  • Tennis
  • Top News
  • Video
  • World Sport
Sport

© 2020 JBC - JOOJ Clone ScriptsJOOJ.us.

Explore the JBC

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Reel
  • Future
  • Culture
  • More

Follow Us

  • American Football
  • Athletics
  • Basketball
  • Boxing
  • Cricket
  • Cycling
  • Football
  • Formula1
  • Golf
  • Rugby U
  • Tennis
  • Top News
  • Video
  • World Sport
  • Swimming
  • Login

© 2020 JBC - JOOJ Clone ScriptsJOOJ.us.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Sport
More Sites

    MORE

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Reel
  • Future
  • Culture
  • More
    • Music
  • Sport

    JBC Sport