From Deseret News archives:

'Blade Runner' keeps hope alive

Published: Tuesday, April 29, 2008 12:36 a.m. MDT
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U.S. Paralympians don't want to be told they can't do anything nor that they don't belong.

And they're watching closely and silently cheering on a South African peer, double-amputee sprinter Oscar Pistorius, who is creating international headlines in seeking to compete in the 2008 Beijing Olympic sprint events on his pair of carbon-fiber blades — called "cheetah legs" — attached below his knees.

Nicknamed "Blade Runner" and self-proclaimed as "the fastest thing on no legs," Pistorius earlier this month won a chance to appeal to the International Association of Athletics Federation ban last year against "technical aids" and the IAAF's ruling in January that Pistorius couldn't compete.

The appeal will be later this week before the Court of Arbitration for Sport for Pistorius, who holds the Paralympic records in the 100, 200 and 400 meters and whose time of 10.91 seconds in the 100 at the 2004 Athens Paralympics would have been good for gold in the women's Olympic event.

"Whether you're missing one leg or two legs, it takes a lot more physical energy to move that prosthetic," said U.S. Paralympian Josh Olson at the recent 2008 U.S. Olympic Committee Media Summit.

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Olson wears a prosthetic, having lost all of his right leg nearly five years ago in Iraq when his Army squad was ambushed and hit by a rocket-propelled grenade.

The 28-year-old Purple Heart recipient spent nearly a year and a half at Walter Reed Army Medical Center before assignment to the Army's Marksmanship Unit in Fort Benning, Ga., where he currently serves as an instructor.

Two years ago, he became the first Paralympic athlete nominated to the Army's World Class Athlete Program.

"Yeah, you can say the elasticity of it or what not gives you an advantage," Olson continued on the use of prosthetics, "but you still have to use the portions of the body you have left to make it work."

Sixteen-year-old Jessica Long of Baltimore also empathizes with Pistorius' ordeal. Born in Russia without fibulas, ankles, heels and other feet bones, she was adopted at 13 months and had both legs amputated below the knees at 18 months.

Learning to swim in her grandparents' pool because her parents worried her gymnastics involvement might damage her knees, Long made the Athens-bound U.S. Paralympic team at age 12 and picked up three gold medals. In all, she has amassed up to 67 U.S., Pan-American, Paralympic and world records and a bevy of such medals.

"I have a pair of running (prosthetic) legs — they do help me with balance," said Long. "But I don't think they give you an advantage — it's the person doing the running."

Recent comments

The IOC should leave it up to his competitors. Will the other...

what do other olympians think? | April 29, 2008 at 11:55 a.m.

The IAAF has ruled that, "An athlete using this prosthetic blade has...

Gemma | April 29, 2008 at 9:29 a.m.

Excellent story.

LanceA | April 29, 2008 at 9:21 a.m.

Image
Andreas Solaro, Getty Images

South Africa's Oscar Pistorius, a Paralympic champion sprinter, is appealing his ban from this summer's Beijing Olympics.

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