Hannah Cockroft wins her SEVENTH Paralympic gold as British wheelchair racing star shows she is in a class of her own to defend her T34 800m crown in Tokyo despite a hand injury
- Hannah Cockroft has overcome a freak injury to win yet another gold medal
- The 29-year-old caught her hand in her wheel just an hour before the 800m race
- Her bloodied hand was wrapped up and she stormed to victory in a wet Tokyo
- Cockroft’s victory is her seventh Paralympic gold medal for Great Britain
Wheelchair racing star Hannah Cockroft shrugged off a freak injury to smash her own Paralympic record as she cruised to the seventh gold of her glittering career in rain-soaked Tokyo.
The 29-year-old suffered a nasty cut after catching her right hand in her chair less than an hour before dominantly defending her T34 800m crown with a Paralympic record time of 1:48.99sec in testing conditions at the Olympic Stadium.
She sported strapping on the wound, which was also covered by custom-made 3D printed gloves – manufactured by her GB team-mate Richard Chiassaro – to provide additional grip in the wet weather.
Hannah Cockroft won her seventh Paralympic gold medal after dominating again in Tokyo
Yorkshire-born Cockroft feared doctors may recommend a withdrawal but doggedly battled on and insisted she would have been on the start line ‘even if my hand’s fallen off’.
‘To come here with a gammy hand, I’m happy,’ she said. ‘I put my hand through the wheel, while the chair was moving – I’ve never done it before.
‘Wheelchairs and rain don’t mix so I slipped off the rim and there’s not really much space to slip into so it went straight in.
The 29-year-old suffered a scare, having injured her hand before the women’s 800m event
However, Cockroft stormed to victory to prove once again that she is in a class of her own
‘My hand went straight round but luckily a coach was stood with me. It’s pretty bloody but it’s fine.’
Asked if she considered pulling out, she replied: ‘No. Never. The doctors and everyone looked like they were going to lean that way but I was [saying] “no way”.
‘Even if my hand’s fallen off I was going to be on that start line. My hand’s a bit sore so I’m struggling to grip a little bit so they just tied my hand a bit tighter.
‘I was hoping it wouldn’t rain. Obviously it’s been a shocking few days for the rain but there we go.’
Cockroft showed no ill-effects as she once again blew away her rivals.
The British star holds the Union Jack flag aloft as she poses next to her time of 1:48.99
She powered out of the blocks and finished more than 10 seconds ahead of British silver medallist Kare Adenegan in a time of 1:48.99, before laughing as she declared herself ‘gutted’ to be just 0.12secs outside her own world record, set in Switzerland earlier this year.
American Alexa Halko prevented ParalympicsGB dominating the podium as she took bronze in 2:02.22, just under seven seconds ahead of fourth-placed Briton Fabienne Andre.
Having already retained her 100m title on this track on Sunday, she heads home four golds short of matching Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson as Britain’s most successful athletics Paralympian after bursting on to the scene with her headline-grabbing performances at London 2012.
Cockroft believes she is capable of even faster track times and would relish an opportunity to work with a Formula One team to further streamline already-exceptional performances.
Cockroft has called for more investment in the sport to set her further ahead of her rivals
Her boyfriend, fellow GB athlete Nathan Maguire – winner of a silver in Friday’s 4x100m universal relay – failed to make it past the heats of the men’s T54 800m, a race won by 10-time world champion Marcel Hug, who collaborated with Swiss engineers to design his chair.
‘I would love that and love the investment, because if you look at this chair it’s not aerodynamic, it’s not the best it could be,’ she said.
‘My chair is as light as it can go but what else can we change, down through my helmet, or my gloves or my push technique?
‘There’s so many things we could look at but as athletes we don’t have the money to put ourselves in a wind chamber or do any of those things so we’re lucky this time we’ve had these rather snazzy suits (skin-tight kits) made.’
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