Skip to main content
12221
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

    A year of firsts: Ed Harry reflects on 2018

    16.11.2018

    BBC journalist recalls emotional moments as season draws to a close

    © •
    By Ed Harry | For World Para Athletics
    Listen to this page using ReadSpeaker

    In the last of his columns this year, BBC correspondent Ed Harry looks back on the highlights of an eventful 12 months.

    2018 has delivered. Not just new stars, like Daniel Romanchuk, but new disciplines too - or rather disciplines new to international Para athletics competition.

    I was there to report for the BBC's UK radio audience on Hannah Dines and Gavin Drysdale winning gold as RaceRunning made its debut at the World Para Athletics European Championships in Berlin.

    Related Images
    Ed Harry of BBC World News is an expert on Para athletics and will be covering London 2017. Ed Harry of BBC World News is an expert on Para athletics © • Ed Harry/BBC

    Working in the media, we constantly want to tell people's back-stories. That's by no means restricted to Para sport; I think it's important to know something about the background of any individual that's achieved something if that information helps to place their sporting success in a wider context.

    That's how I found myself reading Hannah Dines' blogs before I watched her race. There was plenty to read about Gavin Drysdale too. Research has rarely been as much fun and they'd both drawn me into their sport before race day came along.

    Le Fur’s phenomenal jump

    The WPA European Championships had many stand-out moments. Anyone who has followed Marie Amelie Le Fur's story over the last year will appreciate the outpouring of emotion which greeted one of the most incredible jumps I have ever seen in the sport of track and field. The Frenchwoman's 6.01m added 18 centimetres to her existing world record and was the first leap ever to break the six-metre barrier in the T64 classification.

    I was sat in my commentary position with the perfect view of the pit, seeing Le Fur break the sand and the chain reaction that set off in the crowd of French athletes and officials who were right there living the moment with her. Coming just months after the loss of her unborn baby, it was so much more than a celebration of a mark in the sand.

    Breaking the six-metre barrier was comparable to Bob Beamon's leap at the 1968 Olympic Games. In that moment though, it was about the wider role that sport can play in our lives.

    One of those who congratulated Le Fur was the event's bronze medallist, Stef Reid. Only when I got home from Berlin did I fully appreciate what else Stef had been up to. UK television viewers got to see her reach the latter stages of the BBC's 'Celebrity MasterChef' which gave me every excuse I needed to tell as many people as possible what Stef does for a day job.

    A hug for Heinrich

    The wider exposure of Para athletes is growing year-on-year, and that brings me to one of the few athletes who has ever hugged me after an interview. I'm very much a handshake kind of person and you will never find me asking an interviewee for a selfie. However, after conducting a retirement interview with Heinrich Popow in Berlin, it was time to hug. We'd been discussing his appearance on 'Dancing with the Stars' and how his desire to connect with the wider German public had caused him to push his body past it's limits, ultimately leading to him missing London 2017 as he recovered from those injuries.

    Popow spoke about London 2012 and what a game changer it was, and about his future plans. I said I hoped we could persuade him to spend some time in the BBC commentary box too. He remembered doing just that one afternoon at the Lyon World Championships and is keen to be there with us in Tokyo.

    Romanchuk to rule in 2019?

    I began by mentioning Daniel Romanchuk, one of those names I picked out in my first column of 2018. I'd just seen him finish third in the London Marathon straight after making the podium in Boston. I concluded in my piece that "Coach Adam Bleakney has found yet another athlete of real promise".

    Yes he has.

    Romanchuk has gone on to break world records on the track and win both the Chicago and New York Marathons, the latter in a sprint finish ahead of Marcel Hug and David Weir. The 20-year-old defeated those same two all-time greats of T54 racing in Chicago, after both had beaten him in the British capital back in April.

    In the days after his New York win, Daniel told me on the BBC World Service that the short-term goal is "hopefully medalling" at the Tokyo Paralympic Games and that gold there would be "quite incredible". I'm not alone in thinking he can do it, and so can a whole host of young athletes who've had a breakthrough year. Bring on 2019 and the World Championships.

    Related News
    Daniel Romanchuk makes history in New York
    Berlin 2018: Marie-Amelie le Fur makes history
    Berlin 2018: Emotional end for Heinrich Popow
    Berlin 2018: RaceRunning breaks new ground
    Berlin 2018: Battle of the Brits
    Berlin 2018: Kare Adenegan takes 100m gold
    Berlin 2018: Five things learned ahead of Tokyo 2020
    • 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
    02:48:57