Men's 100 metres T33 at the XV Paralympic Games | |||||||||||||
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Venue | Estádio Olímpico João Havelange | ||||||||||||
Dates | 10 September 2016 | ||||||||||||
Competitors | 7 from 4 nations | ||||||||||||
Medalists | |||||||||||||
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The Athletics at the 2016 Summer Paralympics – Men's 100 metres T33 event at the 2016 Paralympic Games took place on 10 September 2016, at the Estádio Olímpico João Havelange.
22:12 10 September 2016: [1]
Rank | Lane | Bib | Name | Nationality | Reaction | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 1795 | Ahmad Almutairi | Kuwait | 16.61 | |||
4 | 1505 | Toby Gold | Great Britain | 17.84 | |||
8 | 1520 | Andrew Small | Great Britain | 17.96 | |||
4 | 6 | 1499 | Dan Bramall | Great Britain | 18.16 | ||
5 | 5 | 1798 | Naser Saleh | Kuwait | 21.22 | ||
6 | 3 | 1548 | Denis Schmitz | Germany | 21.22 | ||
7 | 7 | 2369 | John Roberts | United States | 21.88 |
T38 and CP8 are disability sport classification for disability athletics intended for people with cerebral palsy. It includes people who have coordination impairments such as hypertonia, ataxia and athetosis. Runners in this class may appear to have a slight limp when they are running but otherwise have a stride similar to able-bodied runners. Events for this class include 100 meters, 400 meters, 1,500 meters, and the long jump.
T33 and CP3 are disability sport classification for disability athletics. The class competes using a wheelchair. The classification is one of eight for people with cerebral palsy, and one of four for people with cerebral palsy who use a wheelchair. Athletes in this class have moderate quadriplegia, and difficulty with forward trunk movement. They also may have hypertonia, ataxia and athetosis.
T35 is a disability sport classification for disability athletics' running competitions. It includes people who have coordination impairments such as hypertonia, ataxia and athetosis. This includes people with cerebral palsy. The classification is used at the Paralympic Games. The corresponding F35 classification includes club and discus throw, shot put, and javelin.
T36 is a disability sport classification for disability athletics. It includes people who have coordination impairments such as hypertonia, ataxia and athetosis. It includes people with cerebral palsy. T36 is used by the International Paralympic Committee. This classification competes at the Paralympic Games.
T37 is a disability sport classification for disability athletics in track and jump events. It includes people who have coordination impairments such as hypertonia, ataxia and athetosis. It is the athletics equivalent of the more general CP7 classification.
Rosemary Little is an Australian Paralympic athlete. She won a bronze medal in wheelchair racing at the 2012 Summer Paralympics, and has also competed in handcycling. She competed at the 2020 Tokyo Paralympics, her third Games, where switched from wheelchair racing to shot put. She has been selected to compete in the shot put at the selected for the 2024 Paris Paralympics.
Hannah Lucy Cockroft is a British wheelchair racer specialising in sprint distances in the T34 classification and TV presenter.
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Ahmad Almutairi is a Kuwaiti para-sport athlete who competes as a T33 classification track and field athlete and as a wheelchair basketball player, both at national level. Despite the fact that Almutairi held the Paralympic world record for his classification in the 100m, 200m, 400m and 800m events, major world titles eluded him due to the fact that his classification was under-represented and he was forced to compete against less severely disabled athletes in the T44 class. He eventually won a gold medal at the 2016 Summer Paralympics.
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Harri Jenkins is a British Paralympic athlete who competes in sprint and middle-distance events in the T33 classification.
Athletics at the 2024 Summer Paralympics was held at the Stade de France and Les Invalides in Paris. There were 164 events: 90 for men, 73 for women and one mixed event, three fewer men's events than the previous Games while the women's and mixed events remain the same. It was the largest contest of the Games programme regarding athlete numbers and medal events to be scheduled.