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   Web Issue 3191 July 5 2008   
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Amputee athlete wins right to chase Olympic goal
ALISON CHIESAMay 17 2008

Oscar Pistorius, the disabled sprinter known as the fastest man on no legs, yesterday won the right to again compete against able-bodied athletes and now faces another battle to qualify for this summer's Olympic Games.

Pistorius overturned an International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) ban, imposed following claims his prosthetic legs offered him a mechanical advantage, after he won his appeal at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).

The court ruled that, on the basis of the information brought by experts called by both parties, there was insufficient evidence of any metabolic advantage in favour of the double amputee using the Cheetah Flex-Foot - the carbon-fibre prosthetic limb.

Pistorius's legal team used test findings which concluded that prosthetics do not give him an unfair advantage. That was accepted by the tribunal, clearing the way for the 21-year-old South African and 2004 Paralympic 200-metre gold medallist to pursue a lifetime ambition of competing at the Olympic Games.

"I am thrilled with the panel's findings," said Pistorius, speaking in Milan after CAS announced its adjudication. "I hope that it silences many of the crazy theories that have been circulating in recent months about my having an unfair advantage.

"My focus throughout this appeal has been to ensure that disabled athletes be given the chance to compete and compete fairly with able-bodied athletes."

Pistorius, who hopes to race over 400 metres at the Beijing Olympics, added: "Now I can definitely say the truth has come out.

"I have the opportunity once again to chase my dream of the Olympics, if not 2008, in 2012. As you can imagine, I have been struggling to hide my smile for the past half an hour."

The task for the "Blade Runner" to make the South African team will not be easy because even in his best form, he is well short of the Olympic qualifying time which must be achieved by July 23.

Pistorius, whose fastest 400m is 46.46 seconds, needs to run the Olympic "A" standard of 45.55 seconds or the "B" qualifier of 45.95 seconds, if no other athlete from his country attains the higher one. It will be a tough target for the disabled athlete.

Pistorius was born without fibulas and had his legs amputated below the knee when he was 11 months old.

Even before the result of his tribunal was announced, organisers of international events in Britain and Italy said if it was successful, they were prepared to include him at their meetings.

It is expected that Pistorius, who took up serious running four years ago, will have many other offers made to him by European promoters before the summer season gets into full swing next month - all of which should offer opportunities of achieving the Olympic standard.

The CAS members stressed in a statement that their decision only related to Pistorius, whose legal team from Dewey and LeBoeuf successfully overturned the IAAF's finding.

It also stressed that any advancements in the prosthetic-limb technology used by Pistorius could be contested by the IAAF again.

However, IAAF President Lamine Diack accepted the CAS decision and said the world governing body was pleased to announce that Pistorius is eligible to compete in competitions under its rules.

"The IAAF accepts the decision of CAS and Oscar will be welcomed wherever he competes this summer," said Mr Diack "He is an inspirational man and we look forward to admiring his achievements in the future."

Pistorius admitted he spent a tense time awaiting the CAS decision but was always confident he would get the right result.

"Of course it was nerve-wracking waiting to find out, but it didn't come as a surprise," he said. "The result will finally cut out all the rumours."


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Posted by: Anne, @Staind on 1:03am Sat 17 May 08
For he's a jolly good fella, for he's a jolly good fella,
and so say all of us.
Swinging cool prosthetics, btw. Surreal!
Posted by: Anne on 1:59am Sat 17 May 08
Thirty years of research and testing by ÖSSUR, Reykjavik, Iceland, made it to happen in 2008!
President and CEO of Össur, Jon Sigurdsson said: "I'm delighted and proud on this historical day (yesterday) because now there is nothing to hold Oscar back. All the obstacles in his path have been swept away, and we will again have an opportunity to watch as this extraordinary young man changes how we perceive sport."
Posted by: Im no really here, but over there on 10:51am Sat 17 May 08
Please be aware that Oscar wear "normal" prosthetics in everyday life. He then changes these for the "Cheetah Flex-Foot" prosthetics when he gets to the track. The reason for this is that "normal" prosthetics are not suitable for running. It these don't give you an advantage, would it then be OK for able-bodied athletes to wear adaptions of these too?

Haven't they opened the way up for an athlete like Oscar to improve his performance through advancements in the materials used for these prosthetics, rather than through his athletic ability?
Posted by: Anne on 11:46am Sat 17 May 08
My enthousiasm on the court's ruling stems from the fact that my Dad was an abovetheknee amputee after he was the victim of a hit and run military truck driver.
He was in and out of hospital for 3 long years before the doctors decided that the infected open wound in his thigh would never heal, and the leg had to be amputed.
That day I was the only visitor at his bedside when he lost his right leg for good. I was only 15 and didn't know what to say to him and he went quiet too.
That day I was the one who lost my Father. He was never the same
optimistic, funloving man again since the day he lost his leg.
And the pain never subsided.
Posted by: stonehaven on 11:26pm Sat 17 May 08
Im no really here wrote:
Please be aware that Oscar wear "normal" prosthetics in everyday life. He then changes these for the "Cheetah Flex-Foot" prosthetics when he gets to the track. The reason for this is that "normal" prosthetics are not suitable for running. It these don't give you an advantage, would it then be OK for able-bodied athletes to wear adaptions of these too?

Haven't they opened the way up for an athlete like Oscar to improve his performance through advancements in the materials used for these prosthetics, rather than through his athletic ability?
Don't worry, Oscar is way too slow to make this a real problem.
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