There are 4,403 Paralympic athletes competing in Tokyo, each with unique differences that have to be classified. Lines have to be drawn 바카라 in the quest for fairness 바카라 to group similar impairments, or impairments that yield similar results. (More Sports News)
It's a confusing maze. And make no mistake, the Paralympics are competitive and athletes are aware that no matter where a classification line is drawn, some are likely to benefit more than others.
Winning leads to gold medals, sponsorship deals, and other outside funding. And some teams are even known to recruit athletes in that top range, and often younger athletes.
바카라The problem with the classification is that if you are at the bottom edge you are not happy,바카라 said Heinrich Popow, a two-time gold medalist in track and field.
바카라The athletes always want to have the best classification.바카라
Able-bodied athletes have advantages in certain sports, and athletes with disabilities are not entirely different.
There are 10 impairment groups in the Paralympics: eight involve physical impairments, and the other groupings are for visual and intellectual impairments. But the 22 Paralympic sports adjust the groups to suit their sport, swelling the classifications. Some athletes say they're not always fair.
바카라If we think we can swim or run the same times as everyone else, we feel good being in the class," Popow said.
"But if we feel we're doing our best and can't even reach the limit to qualify, or pass through the heats, you start to complain.바카라
The International Paralympic Committee has just begun a periodic review of the classification system, but changes are unlikely until after the 2024 Paralympics in Paris, spokesman Craig Spence said.
At a quick glance, the current classifications system is hard to digest. For instance, the finals in swimming on Saturday 바카라 each has a men's and women's race 바카라 include: 100-meter breaststroke, SB6 class; 100 freestyle, S10; 150 individual medley, SM4; 150 individual medley, SM3; 100 backstroke, S11; 200 individual medley, SM8; and 100 breaststroke, SB5.
Most athletes agree there must be classes, but they still may dispute the logic or science behind them.
바카라To be honest, athletes don't understand the system," Popow said.
바카라Every athlete just wants to focus on himself and his disability and class. We need to have a classification system overall that everyone understands."
Tea Cisic is the head of classification for the IPC. A kinesiologist, it's her job to access the impairments.
바카라They (athletes) are entitled to complain,바카라 Cisic told The Associated Press.
"They are entitled to come forward and say, I'm not happy with my class. I think I've been incorrectly classified.' And there's a process for them to get reviewed.바카라
Cisic acknowledges the classification system is complex, but said fans need to make an effort to understand it, the way new fans might initially wrestle with the rules of cricket or baseball.
바카라Classification is complex and it does require an investment from the audience to understand how it works," she said. "But once you do that, I think it unfolds.바카라
The Paralympics are more than a benign version of the Olympics. In fact, a few performances are better than the Olympics.
Markus Rehm 바카라 known as the 바카라Blade Jumper바카라 바카라 lost his right leg below the knee when he was 14 in a wakeboarding accident, but earlier this year he jumped 8.62 meters, a distance that would have won the last seven Olympics, including the Tokyo Games. The winning long jump at this year's Olympics was 8.41 meters.
Archer Matt Stutzman was born with no arms, just stumps at the shoulders. He holds a world record 바카라 for any archer, disabled or otherwise 바카라 for the longest, most accurate shot, hitting a target at 310 yards, or about 283 meters.
The largest classification disputes involve athletes with 바카라loss of function" 바카라 spinal cord injuries, spina bifida, and cerebral palsy 바카라 rather than physical impairments like missing limbs of physical deformities.
There tend to be fewer disputes over visible impairments, like the loss of a limb. Coordination impairment from something like cerebral palsy tends to be questioned more.
But the eye deceives. Japanese swimmer Miyuki Yamada won a silver medal this week in the 100-meter backstroke, S2 class. She is 14 and was born without arms. It seemed unfair to see her race against swimmers with arms, and yet she won a medal.
Clearly, other swimmers had disabilities that were more difficult to spot.
Popow, a two-time gold medalist who is retired and not competing in Tokyo, said the Paralympics might be reaching a crossroads. This could involve excluding athletes.
바카라The most important thing for us in the future is to clarity the question: Are we going to go for being a more professional sport, or are we going more for being a motivational sport for the society?" Popow asked.
"If we go more to the professional side, we won't talk so much about inclusion because it will be exclusion. We have marks to be set. Athletes have to fulfil higher levels to attend the Paralympics.바카라
(AP)