![]() Sandy Blythe in action during competition at the 2000 Sydney Paralympics | |||||||||||||||
Personal information | |||||||||||||||
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Full name | Robert Alexander Blythe | ||||||||||||||
Nationality | Australian | ||||||||||||||
Born | 24 February 1962 Geelong, Victoria, Australia | ||||||||||||||
Died | 18 November 2005 43) Melbourne, Victoria, Australia | (aged||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Robert Alexander "Sandy" Blythe, OAM [1] [2] (24 February 1962 – 18 November 2005) was an Australian wheelchair basketball player. He became a paraplegic due to a car accident in 1981, and went on to participate in the Australia men's national wheelchair basketball team at four Paralympic Games, captaining the gold medal-winning team at the 1996 Atlanta Paralympics. He committed suicide in 2005 at the age of 43 after a long illness.
Blythe was born in Geelong on 24 February 1962. [3] He grew up in a farm outside the Victorian town of Derrinallum and was a champion Australian rules football player as a teenager. He played in the Teal Cup and was later part of the St Kilda Football Club country squad. [4] In 1981, he began studying at the Ballarat College of Advanced Education, but later that year, he was involved in a three-car collision that rendered him paraplegic. [4] [5] In 1984 he obtained his physical education degree on schedule, despite his six-month rehabilitation at Austin Hospital. [5]
He was part of the Australia men's national wheelchair basketball team at the 1988 Seoul, 1992 Barcelona, 1996 Atlanta, and 2000 Sydney Paralympics. [6] He was the captain of the team when it won a gold medal at the 1996 Atlanta Games and was co-captain with Priya Cooper of the Australian Paralympic team at the 2000 Sydney Games. [7] [8] He had an Australian Institute of Sport scholarship in 1998 for wheelchair basketball. [9]
Blythe was also a motivational speaker who formed and worked in several businesses that improved public awareness of people with disabilities. [4] [5] In 2000, he released a memoir, Blythe Spirit. [10]
On 18 November 2005, Blythe committed suicide; he had had depression and chronic fatigue syndrome for several years. [4] [11] He was survived by his partner of eight years, wheelchair basketballer Paula Coghlan. [12]
Blythe received a Medal of the Order of Australia in 1997 for his 1996 gold medal. [1] In 2000, he received an Australian Sports Medal. [2] The Sandy Blythe Medal, awarded to the best player of the year in the Australia men's national wheelchair basketball team, is named in his honour. [13] In 2010, he was posthumously inducted into the Australian Basketball Hall of Fame. [7]