Oscar Pistorius a Fallen Hero

I have decided to follow the news and events around Oscar Pistorius, all though it is not local news it is of great interest to South African's and the rest of the world. I just took a look at Oscar Pistorius website:http://www.oscarpistorius.com/

How tragic, this story is, a true South African sporting hero and one of the best in the world. This was Oscar Pistorius agenda from March to May:

From his website:

Oscar had been contracted to compete in the below listed races. Further competitions were being discussed as Oscar focused on the IAAF World Championships in Moscow in August as the highlight for his season.
09 March – Qantas Athletics Tour, Sydney, Australia
16 March – Qantas Athletics Tour, Perth, Australia
31 March – Rio, Brazil
26 April – Drake Relays , Iowa, USA
25 May – Manchester City Games, UK

Here are some interesting facts from his website:

Fact file:
Born: 22 November 1986
Place of Birth: Johannesburg, South Africa
Hometown: Pretoria, South Africa
Amputation Level: Bi-lateral, below the knee
Main Events: 100m, 200m, 400m

Competitive Class: T43/T44
T43: Double below knee amputees and other athletes with impairments that are equivalent to a double below knee amputation
T44: Single below knee amputees and other athletes with impairments that are equivalent to single below knee amputee
Personal Bests:
100m: 10.91 seconds (South Africa, April 2007)
200m: 21.30 seconds (London, September 2012)
400m: 45.07 seconds (Italy, July 2011)

Major Achievements:
GOLD: T43/44 200m, 2004 Paralympic Games, Athens
BRONZE: T43/44 100m, 2004 Paralympic Games, Athens
GOLD: T43/44 100m, 2008 Paralympic Games, Beijing
GOLD: T43/44 200m, 2008 Paralympic Games, Beijing
GOLD: T43/44 400m, 2008 Paralympic Games, Beijing
GOLD: T43/44 4x100m relay, 2012 Paralympic Games, London
GOLD: T43/44 400m, 2012 Paralympic Games, London
SILVER: T43/44 200m, 2012 Paralympic Games, London

Sponsors: Nike, BT, Oakley, Thierry Mugler
Biography
Early years...
Oscar Pistorius was born on 22 November 1986 without the fibula, the long, slender bone running along the outside of the leg from below the knee joint and down to the ankle, in each of his legs.
His parents, Henk and Sheila, consulted with some of the leading doctors in the world before making the heart-wrenching decision to have his legs amputated below the knee by South African orthopaedic surgeon Dr Gerry Versveld.
His parents were advised by doctors that having the amputation done before Oscar had learnt to walk would be less traumatic for him and would greatly improve his chances of mobility in later life. Six months later he received his first pair of prosthetic legs and within days he had mastered them.
Supported and encouraged by his sports-mad family, Oscar lived an active life which led to him becoming a keen sportsman during his school years. Whatever the sport, Oscar played it, with his main focus being waterpolo and rugby in secondary school. He also played cricket, tennis, took part in triathlons and Olympic club wrestling and was an enthusiastic boxer.
In June 2003, he shattered his knee playing rugby for Pretoria Boys High School and feared that his sporting career was over at the age of 16. On the advice of Dr Versveld, Oscar took up track running to aid his rehabilitation and began training under the guidance of coach Ampie Louw at the Sports Science Institute at the University of Pretoria.
Proud Paralympian
After a few months in the gym, Oscar took part in his first track session on New Year's Day, 2004.
Three weeks later he entered a school 100 metres race on the prompting of one of his teachers and won in a time of 11.72 seconds. After the race his father looked up how Oscar's time compared to the best in the world and Henk discovered that his 17-year-old son's time was faster than the existing Paralympic world record of 12.20s.
In June 2004, he was given his first pair of Össur manufactured Flex-Foot Cheetahs and eight months after first stepping onto the track, the South African created a sensation in the athletics world by winning the T44 200m gold medal at the Athens Paralympics, breaking the world record with a time of 21.97s. He also returned home with a bronze medal in the 100m and overnight was propelled onto front and back pages around the world.
Oscar is a proud Paralympian and believes that the Paralympic Games in London were a high watermark for the Paralympic movement. Oscar has ambitions to continue to promote the Paralympic movement and educate and inspire people around the world about the Paralympic Games.
Bridging the gap
Spurred on by his achievements at the Paralympic Games, Oscar set his sights on competing against able-bodied athletes and at the South African Championships in March 2005 he finished sixth in the 400m final.
His performances continued to gain attention and headlines across the world and after he had won gold in the T44 100m and 200m disciplines at the Paralympic World Cup in Manchester, England, he was invited by the IAAF to run in a Grand Prix meeting in Helsinki but was unable to attend due to school commitments.
It was at the IAAF Golden Gala event at the Olympic Stadium in Rome on 13 July 2007 that Pistorius first competed internationally against able-bodied athletes. In the 'B' race, he finished second across 400m in a time of 46.90s.
IAAF ruling
In November 2007, Oscar was invited to take part in a series of scientific tests at the Cologne Sports University under the guidance of Professor of Biomechanics Dr Peter Brüggemann in conjunction with Mr Elio Locatelli, who was responsible with the IAAF of all technical issues.
After two days of tests Brüggemann reported on his findings on behalf of the IAAF. The report claimed that Pistorius was able to run at the same speed as able bodied athletes while using less energy and that his prosthetic limbs gave him an advantage over able-bodied athletes.
Pistorius strongly challenged the report claiming that the tests were biased and scientifically flawed. Following an IAAF vote, Pistorius was banned from all able-bodied athletics competitions.
Pistorius employed the services of law firm Dewey & LeBoeuf to challenge the ruling via an appeal and travelled to America to take part in a series of further tests carried out at Rice University in Houston by a team of scientists including Hugh Herr, Ph.D. and Rodger Kram, Ph.D.
After a two day hearing, on 16 May 2008 the Court of Arbitration for Sport upheld Oscar's appeal and the IAAF council decision was revoked with immediate effect.
The CAS panel unanimously determined that Dr. Brüggemann only tested Oscar's biomechanics at full-speed when he was running in a straight line (unlike a real 400m race), that the IAAF did not consider the disadvantages that Oscar suffers at the start and acceleration phases of the race, that Dr. Brüggemann did not consider disadvantages that Oscar suffers, and that overall there was no evidence that Oscar had any net advantage over able-bodied athletes.
Pistorius' ability to train sufficiently for Beijing had been hampered by the scientific testing and court proceedings and yet he finished third at the Spitzen Leichtathletik meeting in Lucerne with a personal best time of 46.25s - 0.70 seconds outside the Olympic qualifying time.
Pistorius concentrated on the Paralympics in Beijing and became the first athlete in history to win gold in the 100m, 200m and 400m events in the T43/T44 category, the latter in a new Paralympic record of 47.49s.
Career in Progress

On 21 February 2009, Oscar suffered serious head and facial injuries in a boat accident on the Vaal River in Johannesburg. He was airlifted to hospital and was in intensive care for five days.

The accident altered his lifestyle and strengthened his focus. He recovered from his injuries and turned his attention to continuing to break Paralympic records and working to achieve the required time for Olympic qualification.

In January 2011, a slimmer, trimmer Pistorius won three IPC Athletics World titles in New Zealand but was beaten for the first time in seven years in the 100m by American Jerome Singleton.

Oscar subsequently won the T44 400m in 47.28s and the 100m in 11.04s at the BT Paralympic World Cup in May to reassert himself as the world’s leading Paralympic sprinter.

He competed across a number of able-bodied races in the summer of 2011 and posted three times under 46 seconds but it was in Lignano, Italy, on 19 July that Oscar set a personal best of 45.07s in the 400m, attaining the World Championships and Olympic Games ‘A’ standard qualification mark.

The IAAF World Championships, Daegu

On 08 August 2011 it was announced that Oscar had been included in the South African team for the IAAF World Championships in Daegu and was selected for the 400m and 4x400m relay squad.

In the heats of the 400m, Oscar finished third in a time of 45.39s, his second quickest time ever, to qualify for the semi-final.
The semi-final saw him finish eighth in his race in 46.19s.

In the heats of the 4x400m relay, Oscar ran the opening leg as the South African team advanced to the finals with a national record time of 2:59.21s. Pistorius was not selected for the final but was awarded a historic silver medal having run in the heats and so became the first ever Paralympic athlete to win a World Championship medal.

London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games

Oscar was required to race the Olympic qualification time of 45.30s between January-June 2012. Oscar achieved this feat at the Provincial Championships for Gauteng North in South Africa on 17 March, setting a time of 45.20s.

Oscar was selected to compete for Team South Africa at the London 2012 Olympic Games in the individual 400m event plus the 4x400m relay.

Oscar competed in the 400m heat of the Olympic Games on Saturday 04 August and had a strong race to finish in second position in a time of 45.44s, his second fastest time of the year. The result qualified Oscar for the semi-final, where he finished in eighth place in a time of 46.54s.

The 4x400m heats on the morning of 09 August were a rollercoaster experience, with the Kenyan team being disqualified from the competition after a collision with Ofense Mogatwane who was racing on the second leg for South Africa. Oscar Pistorius and Willie De Beer, ready on the third and fourth legs, never received the baton.

After the South African management appealed the squad were reinstated in the competition and given lane one out of nine lanes in the Olympic final.

The following evening Oscar and his teammates Shaun De Jager, LJ Van Zyl and Willie De Beer competed against a world class field with Oscar on the anchor leg, finishing in eighth place in the Olympic final.

The Paralympic Games in London just a couple of weeks later saw Oscar given the honour of being Flagbearer for his country in the Opening Ceremony and his athletes competition started well with a T43 world record in the 200m.

The final of the 200m saw Oscar take the silver medal behind Alan Oliveira of Brazil, his first competitive loss over the distance in nine years.

A determined Pistorius came out for the 4x100m relay with the South African team with the aim of not only taking the title but also breaking their own world record; the feat was duly completed with Oscar anchoring the quartet of Samkelo Radebe, Zivan Smith and Arnu Fourie home in a time of 41.78 seconds, taking over seven tenths off their previous record.

Oscar was then part of one of the most competitive Paralympic races in history when he finished fourth behind Britain’s Jonnie Peacock, America’s Richard Brown and South Africa’s Arnu Fourie in the 100m, in a season’s best time of 11.17s.

In what has widely been viewed as the most successful Olympic and Paralympic Games of all time, Oscar competed in his favoured 400m in the very last event on the track and stormed home to take the Paralympic title in a new Paralympic record of 46.68s.

Eleven races on the Olympic track had resulted in two Paralympic gold medals, Paralympic silver, two world records, a Paralympic record, an Olympic individual semi-final and an Olympic final. Oscar deemed his summer “a dream come true.”

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