Atheletes - Hall of Fame - Inductees
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Martin MorseCoach, USAImagen
Martin Morse
The USA’s Morse served as the head coach for the University of Illinois Wheelchair Track and Road Racing Team from 1981-2004, a time that saw his athletes win 52 Paralympic medals.
Twelve years after stepping down as head coach, the University of Illinois continues to produce some of the top wheelchair racers, many who are competing in Rio 2016.
Morse also invented the Harness Wheelchair Racing Glove, a glove to lower the risk of acute and chronic injuries and improve athlete performance. He also developed the “Illinois Para-Backhand Stroke,” providing a substantive analysis and explanation of wheelchair racing technique.
“This award is the culmination of the work ethic instilled in me by parents, Everett and Eleanor Morse, following an off-road motorcycle accident in 1975 which left me with an incomplete spinal cord injury,” Morse said. “While completing my rehabilitation at Boston University Medical Centre, I read an article about the wheelchair sports programme at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. I wanted to coach distance runners and wheelchair athletes, however I wanted to approach my coaching from a science background.”
Morse also thanked his mentors Dr. Bradley Hedrick and Dr. Stephen Figoni; working with then-athlete Sharon Hedrick; physical therapists Dr. Anne Hart and Tim Millikan; his wife Karen and his two sons Steven and Sam.
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Franz NietlishpachAthletics, Cycling, Table Tennis, SwitzerlandImagen
Franz Nietlishpach
Switzerland’s multi-talented Nietlispach competed in nine Paralympics between 1976 and 2008, across athletics, handcycling and table tennis, collecting 14 gold medals.
Nieltlispach dominated wheelchair racing, both on the track and in the marathon. At Athens 2004, he claimed his 23rd and final medal, which was a bronze in the handcycle time trial.
The Swiss is currently a motivational speaker, sports marketier and founder of “carbonbike,” the world’s leading producer of handcycles.
“First of all, I would like to thank you for inducting me into the Visa Hall of Fame,” Nieltlispach said. “It is a big honour and gives me a great reason to come to Rio and meet all the athletes and friends again. Furthermore, it provides the opportunity to share all the good memories I got since my first Paralympic Games 40 years ago in 1976.
“As I see it, sport is a perfect platform to reintegrate disabled athletes into society. Successful wheelchair athletes are role models.”
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Neroli Susan FairhallArchery, New ZealandImagen
Neroli Susan Fairhall
New Zealand’s ever-talented Fairhall will be inducted posthumously. She competed in athletics and archery in her first two Paralympic Games in 1972 and 1980. But it was archery where she excelled the most, taking the gold at Arnhem 1980. Four years later, she became the first athlete with an impairment to compete in the Olympics, finishing 35th at the Los Angeles Olympic Games.
Honing her skills in archery, Fairhall went on to compete at the 1988 and 2000 Paralympics.
She was awarded an Order of the British Empire (MBE) by Queen Elizabeth II and the prestigious New Zealand Olympic Committee Lonsdale Cup in 1982 in recognition of the archery gold medal she won at the Brisbane 1982 Commonwealth Games, where she was also the first athlete with an impairment to compete in those Games.
Fairhall passed away in 2006 at age 61.
“Neroli is still a recognised household name in New Zealand despite her death in 2006,” said Carol Hicks, Judges Commission at Archery New Zealand and Chairperson at World Archery. “Even perfect strangers, when hearing I'm involved in archery, [I] immediately remember ‘that fantastic lady in the wheelchair’ and her outstanding achievements. Neroli was a very popular motivational speaker and inspired all New Zealander’s. In particular, her achievements have set the foundations for the ever growing number and depth of talented Paralympians and Para athletes in New Zealand today.”
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Chantal PetitclercAthletics, CanadaImagen
Chantal Petitclerc
Petitclerc is the most-decorated female track Paralympian, winning 21 medals, 14 being gold. The Canadian made her Paralympic debut at Barcelona 1992, and went on to compete in four further editions. In her last Games at Beijing 2008, Petitclerc closed her athletic career with a statement – she won every track title from 100m through to 1,500m T54, for the second time in a row, breaking world records along the way. She still holds the world record in the 200m T54.
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Junichi KawaiSwimming, JapanImagen
Junichi Kawai
Kawai is Japan’s most successful male Para swimmer after amassing 21 medals, including five golds, over six Paralympic Games between 1992 and 2012. Amid his athletic career, Kawai also founded the Paralympians Association of Japan in 2003.
Following Kawai’s retirement from the pool, he was appointed as President of the Japanese Para-Swimming Federation. Kawai was also the first blind teacher to work at an able-bodied school in Japan. He is currently a motivational speaker, University lecturer and Vice Chairman of the Tokyo 2020 Athletes’ Commission.
“Being inducted into the Hall of Fame means receiving honor with all the people who supported me, and also serve [an honor to serve] as a representative for Japan and Asia,” Kawai said.
“All six Paralympic Games are unforgettable. But I clearly felt the passion of the Paralympics at my first Games in Barcelona,” Kawai added. “That experience and feeling of receiving each of my five gold medals are the driving force for me today to keep the Movement going [especially into Tokyo 2020].”