Skip to main content
17808
Back to International Paralympic Committee homepage Go to Official website of World Para Athletics
Contrast:
High Contrast
Normal Contrast
Enlargement:
Larger Font Size
Default Font Size
Smaller Font Size
Official website of World Para Athletics
    • Home
    • News
    • Competitions
    • Athletes
    • Results and Rankings
    • Records
    • Videos
    • Classification
    • Anti Doping
    • Education
    • About
    • Newsletter
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Youtube
    • Instagram
    • News
    • Blogs

    Greaves Out to Change Paralympic Perceptions in London

    12.08.2011

    In the lead-up to London 2012, the British discus thrower has been breaking world records and setting new standards every competition.

    By IPC
    Listen to this page using ReadSpeaker

    “We’ve really pushed the sport and taken the world record way beyond what it used to be.”

    Editor’s note: This is Part 6 of an eight-part series featuring some of the top competitors in Athletics as we approach the one-year mark to the London 2012 Paralympic Games.

    Dan Greaves throws metal bars, chains and chairs on a daily basis.

    Or at least six days a week, he does.

    He leaves Day 7 for relaxation and spending time with his girlfriend.

    As the reigning world champion in the F44 discus event, Greaves is enduring various types of training sessions for his third Paralympic Games in London next summer.

    “We’re an all-around athlete, really,” the Brit said of those in his discipline.

    “Discus throwers need to be fast, need to be strong, need to be agile, need to be flexible, and then kind of combine that all with throwing and orientation skills to throw the discus with such high speeds and such high power and actually stay in a small circle. You want to try to throw it as far as you can, but you’ve actually got kind of a limited room to do so.”

    And for Greaves, who was born with a foot deformity, there is even more to it.

    He said he has to slightly change his throwing technique because of his physical disability. Whereas an able-bodied competitor pushes off his toes, Greaves has to push off his heel because he is not able to point his toes. He must turn his body all the way around on just his heels.

    At January’s 2011 International Paralympic Committee (IPC) World Championships in Christchurch, New Zealand, Greaves competed against single below-the-knee amputee athletes and other athletes with impairments equivalent to them.

    He came away with a gold medal and a new world-record throw of 58.98m.

    Since then, he has bettered that world record twice. On 27 May, he threw a distance of 59.27m at the BT Paralympic World Cup in Manchester, Great Britain. He then threw 59.58m at the U.S. Paralympic Track and Field Championships in Florida on 20 June, setting an unofficial new world record.

    Prior to the 2008 Paralympic Games, Greaves was hoping to eventually compete in both the Olympic and Paralympic Games by 2012, but after placing third in Beijing, he decided to put it off.

    “That dream kind of died a bit after Beijing after coming in third, so we kind of just really focused on dominating the Paralympic world and then putting the Olympics on the backburner,” Greaves said.

    The 28-year-old is now training six days a week alongside able-bodied athletes and he is also receiving funding from UK Sport.

    Greaves recently faced able-bodied athletes in a London Diamond League competition and wants to enter into more able-bodied competitions in the future.

    But for now, his focus is on the Paralympic Games, where his main opposition is likely to be the USA’s Jeremy Campbell and Denmark’s Jackie Christiansen.

    Greaves already has Paralympic gold in his pocket from the Athens 2004 Games, where he threw a distance of 55.12m, but the level of competition has increased dramatically since then.

    “We’ve really pushed the sport and taken the world record way beyond what it used to be,” Greaves said.

    “Athens training was fun and there wasn’t really too much pressure. Now, this is a business and this is a high level of elite sport, and medals can be whipped away from you at any opportunity.”

    With his home crowd backing him in London and his father – a former javelin thrower – in the stands, Greaves feels that he can truly turn some heads and change perceptions of Paralympic Sport.

    “In Beijing it was actually kind of scary that there were 80,000 people cheering not only for yourself, but more for the Chinese people,” Greaves said.

    “It will be really nice knowing the support that you can hear (in London) will actually be for yourself.”

    • Tweet
      • print
      • send
    LATEST NEWS
    Nadezhda Fedorova suspended for anti-doping violation 05.08.2019 Nadezhda Fedorova suspended for anti-doping violation
    Nottwil 2019: USA top table as Junior Worlds conclude 05.08.2019 Nottwil 2019: USA top table as Junior Worlds conclude
    Nottwil 2019: Breathless third day 04.08.2019 Nottwil 2019: Breathless third day
    Nottwil 2019: Noah Malone makes his way 03.08.2019 Nottwil 2019: Noah Malone makes his way
    Vote for July’s Athlete of the Month 02.08.2019 Vote for July’s Athlete of the Month
    More news...following the link
    Worldwide Paralympic Partners
    Go to Atos partner page
    Go to Bridgestone partner page
    Go to OttoBock partner page
    Go to Panasonic partner page
    Go to Samsung partner page
    Go to Toyota partner page
    Go to Visa partner page
    International Partners
    Go to Allianz partner page
    Go to BP partner page
    Go to Citi partner page
    • FAQ
    • Privacy
    • Imprint
    • Jobs
    Powered by Go to Atos. Worldwide IPC partner page
    The Paralympic Games
    Summer Games
    Winter Games
    Sochi 2014
    Rio 2016
    All the results & medallist since 1960
    Games video archive
    About the IPC
    Who we are
    Anti-Doping
    Medical
    Partners
    IPC Strategic Plan 2015-2018
    IPC Handbook
    Publications and Documents
    Media Centre
    News
    Features & Interviews
    The Paralympian
    Videos
    Athlete of the Month
    Media Office
    Sports
    Summer Sports
    Winter Sports
    Biographies
    NPCS
    Africa
    America
    Asia
    Europe
    Oceania
    Go to International Paralympic Committee homepage
    Official Website of the Paralympic Movement • IPC
    Homepage
    Paralympic Games
    The IPC
    Results, Ranking & Records
    Media Centre
    Videos
    Sports
    International Paralympic Committee (IPC)
    Adenauerallee 212-214, 53113 Bonn, Germany
    Telephone: +49-228-2097-200 • Fax: +49-228-2097-209 • E-mail: info@paralympic.org
    18:04:45