Christopher Scott (cyclist)

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FullnameChristopher Ian Scott
NicknameGecko[1]
Born (1968-10-29) 29 October 1968 (age 57)
Gympie, Australia
DisciplineTrack & Road
Christopher Scott
Personal information
Full nameChristopher Ian Scott
NicknameGecko[1]
Born (1968-10-29) 29 October 1968 (age 57)
Gympie, Australia
Team information
DisciplineTrack & Road
RoleRider
Medal record
Men's track cycling
Paralympic Games
Gold medal – first place1996 AtlantaMixed 5,000 m Time Trial Bicycle CP Div 4
Gold medal – first place2000 SydneyMixed Bicycle Time Trial (CP 4)
Gold medal – first place2004 AthensMen's Road Race / Time Trial Bicycle CP Div 4
Gold medal – first place2004 AthensMen's Individual Pursuit Bicycle CP Div 4
Gold medal – first place2004 AthensMen's Team Sprint LC1-4/CP 3/4
Gold medal – first place2008 BeijingMen's Individual Pursuit (CP 4)
Silver medal – second place1996 AtlantaMixed 20k Bicycle CP Div 4
Silver medal – second place2008 BeijingMen's Individual Time Trial CP4
Bronze medal – third place2000 SydneyMixed Bicycle Road Race (CP 4)
Bronze medal – third place2008 BeijingMen's 1km time trial (CP 4)
IPC Para-cycling Track and Road World Championships
Gold medal – first place2002 AltenstadtMen' 1000 m Time Trial CP4
Gold medal – first place2002 AltenstadtMen' 3000 m Individual Pursuit CP4
Gold medal – first place2002 AltenstadtMen' Road Time Trial CP4
Gold medal – first place2006 BordeauxMen' 3000 m Individual Pursuit CP4
Silver medal – second place2002 AltenstadtMen' Road Time Race CP4
Silver medal – second place1998 Colorado SpringsMixed Individual Pursuit CP4
Silver medal – second place1998 Colorado SpringsMixed Time Trial CP4
Silver medal – second place1994 HasseltMen's 5000m CP4
Bronze medal – third place1994 HasseltMen's 20000m CP4
Bronze medal – third place1998 Colorado SpringsMixed Road Time Trial CP4
Bronze medal – third place1998 Colorado SpringsMixed Road Race CP4
Bronze medal – third place2006 BordeauxMen' 1000 m Time Trial CP4

Christopher Ian Scott, OAM[2] (born 29 October 1968)[1] is a former Australian Paralympic cyclist. He has won ten medals at six Games from 1988 to 2008.

Scott was born in Gympie, Queensland, with cerebral palsy, as the youngest of three children.[3][4] and moved to Brisbane with his family when he was two years old.[4] At the age of eight, a soccer coach refused to let him join his team because he could not kick the ball with his right foot as well as he could with his left, a rule not enforced on able-bodied players. He consequently joined the next age group's soccer team so he could play with his brother.[5] Scott attended Salisbury State High School and it was here where he began to participate more in sport and became involved in the Sporting Wheelies and Disabled Association.[4]

He works as a records clerk in the Brisbane suburb of Sunnybank.[1] He has been married to Karen since March 2008 and has a stepdaughter.[5][6]

Career

Chris Scott gold medallist individual pursuit at the 2008 Beijing Games

Scott first competed at the Paralympics in 7-a-side Football at the 1988 Seoul Games. He also competed in athletics in the 1992 Paralympics in Barcelona.[4][7] He switched to cycling due to a broken ankle.[5] At the 1996 Atlanta games, he won a gold medal in the Mixed 5,000 m Time Trial Bicycle CP Div 4 event, and a silver medal in the Mixed 20k Bicycle CP Div 4 event.[7] In 1998 and 1999, he held an Australian Institute of Sport Athlete with a Disability scholarship.[8]

At the 2000 Sydney Paralympics, he won a gold medal in the Mixed Bicycle Time Trial CP Div 4 event and a bronze medal in the Mixed Bicycle Road Race CP Div 4 event.[7] At the 2004 Athens Games, Scott was the male captain for the Australian Paralympic team.[1] In the Men's Team Sprint LC1-4/CP 3/4 event at the 2004 Games,[9] Scott, the captain of the Australian cycling team, relinquished his place in the team in the finals so that fellow cyclist Peter Homann could get a chance to win a gold medal at his last Paralympics; the Australian team won the event so Homann received the gold medal along with Scott and the rest of the team.[9][10]

In a 2008 interview, he said of this action: "I already had my gold medal. It's what you do in a team. Peter deserved his chance on the podium."[6] He won two further gold medals in the Men's Road Race / Time Trial Bicycle CP Div 4 and Men's Individual Pursuit Bicycle CP Div 4 events at the 2004 Games.[7] At the 2008 Beijing Games, he won a gold medal in the Men's Individual Pursuit CP4 event, a silver medal in the Men's Individual Time Trial CP4 event and a bronze medal in the Men's 1 km Time Trial CP4 event.[7] The year before these Games, he had had back surgery and then was struck down by a car.[6]

He announced his retirement from Paralympic competition in Beijing due to "old age".[6] He has since become an ambassador for the Cerebral Palsy League.[4]

Recognition

References

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