Yahoo – AFP,
Javier Tovar, 7 Sep 2015
![]() |
Daniel Dias
of Brazil competes in the Men's 100M Freestyle S5 Final during
the IPC Swimming
World Championship on August 17, 2013 in Montreal,
Canada (AFP Photo/Charles
Laberge)
|
Rio de
Janeiro (AFP) - When Brazilian Daniel Dias looks in the mirror he doesn't just
see a young man missing his hands and one leg, but a multiple champion swimmer
helping to turn his country into a Paralympic powerhouse.
Brazil may
be struggling on the football field and not exactly first rank in most Olympic
sports, but one year before it becomes the first South American country to host
the Summer Games, it is emerging as one to watch in the Paralympics.
![]() |
Daniel Dias
of Brazil celebrates with
the gold medal after winning the Men's
200m Freestyle
S5 swimming final
during the London 2012 Paralympic
\Games on September 1, 2012
(AFP
Photo/Glyn Kirk)
|
Brazil
finished in seventh place in the London 2012 games and now hopes to break into
the top five when Rio de Janeiro holds the Paralympics, starting on September
7, 2016.
Generous
funding for the Paralympians appears to be paying off. Things are harder with
the Olympic team, which hopes to get into the top 10 medal rankings, itself a
huge improvement from 22nd place in London.
"We
have a generation of athletes who are absolute winners and who come from London
or after London and are already world champions and record holders," said
Brazilian Paralympic Committee president Andrew Parsons.
Dias, the
best Paralympic swimmer in Brazil, is a leading example.
At 28, he
has 15 Paralympic medals, including 10 golds, and several records. Six of those
golds came in the London games.
"Sport
changed my life, the way I saw and accepted my disability," he said.
"I understood that disabilities are inside all of us, that it's not a
physical thing, because everyone has some kind of disability," he told
AFP.
Different
worlds
The world of Paralympics "doesn't have the superstars of individual sports like Usain Bolt and Michael Phelps," which helps the Brazilians make their mark, said Michel Castellar, editor of the Rio Olimpico blog in the daily Extra.
Despite
preparing to host the two sets of Summer Games, Brazil's own teams lack a
state-of-the-art training center. They're building one for both types of
Olympics -- but only for after the games.
But that
has affected the Olympic teams more than the Paralympic athletes.
The
Paralympics sector in Brazil is unusually well funded thanks to a 2001 law
which gives two percent of lottery proceeds -- rising to 2.7 percent next year
-- to the Olympic and Paralympic committees.
When it
comes to spending that money the Paralympic Committee gets an advantage over
its Olympic brethren: direct control over two of the biggest sectors, swimming
and athletics.
Usually
these would be controlled by their separate federations, but with direct
control the Paralympic committee has been able to decide better how to make
investments.
Hitting
the jackpot
Funding the
Paralympic teams has paid off handsomely: Brazil rose from 24th place to
seventh in the medal haul in 12 years.
![]() |
Daniel Dias
of Brazil celebrates after winning the
Men's 50M Freestyle S5 at the IPC
Swimming World
Championship in Montreal, Canada, August 18,
2013 (AFP
Photo/Charles Laberge)
|
Before the
law was approved, Brazil's Paralympians got 22 medals in the Sydney 2000 games.
Four years later they won 33 medals in Athens, then 47 in 2008 in Beijing. In
London, the haul was 43 medals, including a record 21 gold.
Next year
the committee will have considerably more funds, with the budget rising from
about $23 million in 2014 to $45 million.
"These
resources will help increase preparation of the Paralympic program," and
also the new training center, Parsons said.
The best
athletes will also get scholarships allowing them to train and compete
full-time.
That
success is changing attitudes in a country where the disabled sometimes appear
to be invisible. Poor or non-existent wheelchair accessibility can turn a
simple trip across Rio into a nightmare.
A video
produced by the Paralympic organizers that shows disabled athletes performing
surprising feats and breaking stereotypes has gone viral.
It can be
viewed here:
"For
us, they're not disabled athletes," said Parsons. "They're
athletes."




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