All you need to know about the Paris Paralympics

All you need to know about the Paris Paralympics

We’ve put together a guide with everything you need to know about this summer’s Paralympics.

Paris will stage the summer Games for the first time in 2024. It is the second time France will have hosted a Paralympics after the 1992 Winter Games in Tignes and Albertville.

About 4,400 athletes from around the world will take part in 22 sports, cheered on by crowds again after the rescheduled Tokyo Games in 2021 were held behind closed doors.

The Paralympics will begin with the opening ceremony on 28 August.

This will be held outside a stadium for the first time, and athletes will parade by some of Paris’ most iconic landmarks, located along the route between the Champs-Elysees and the Place de la Concorde.

Spectators can watch along the route before the official parade and formalities take place in front of ticket-holders at the Place de la Concorde.

A total of 22 gold medals will be decided on the opening day of competition on 29 August.

The final day on 8 September will feature medal events in wheelchair basketball, Para-powerlifting, Para-canoe and wheelchair marathons as well as the closing ceremony.

Many of the venues being used at the Olympics will also stage Paralympic events.

Wheelchair tennis will be at Roland Garros, the picturesque Chateau de Versailles gardens will be the venue for the Para-equestrian events, and the Stade de France will host the Para-athletics programme.

The Grand Palais, normally a venue for art and sport events, will host wheelchair fencing and Para-taekwondo, while the blind football competition will be in a specially built stadium at the foot of the iconic Eiffel Tower.

Para-triathletes will compete in the centre of Paris, with the swim leg due to take place in the River Seine.

Channel 4 will show the Games in the UK with more than 1,300 hours of live sport airing across Channel 4, More4, Channel 4 Streaming and Channel 4 Sports YouTube.

BBC Radio 5 Live will have commentary and updates from key events in Paris, starting with 5 Live Drive from 16:00 BST.

There will also be programmes dedicated to the Paralympics on most evenings, usually between 20:00 and 21:00.

The BBC Sport website will have live text commentary and reports on each day of the Games.

There are 22 sports in the Paralympic programme:

Blind football

Boccia

Goalball

Para-archery

Para-athletics

Para-badminton

Para-canoe

Para-cycling

Para-equestrian

Para-judo

Para-powerlifting

Para-rowing

Para-swimming

Para-table tennis

Para-taekwondo

Para-triathlon

Shooting Para-sport

Sitting volleyball

Wheelchair basketball

Wheelchair fencing

Wheelchair rugby

Wheelchair tennis

Unlike the past two editions of the Games, where Para-triathlon and Para-canoe (Rio) and Para-taekwondo and Para-badminton (Tokyo) made their debuts, no new sports are included in the Paris programme.

However, the badminton and taekwondo programmes have been expanded and there are a record number of medal events for women.

A total of 549 gold medals will be up for grabs.

ParalympicsGB will compete in 19 sports in Paris, having failed to qualify in blind football, goalball and sitting volleyball. The GB team is expected to feature about 220 athletes.

You can find the confirmed names of who will be competing here.

In Tokyo, Britain finished second in the medal table behind China with 124 medals, including 41 golds.

Athletes from Russia and Belarus will be allowed to compete at the Games as neutrals.

Both nations have been suspended from Paralympic competition since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. At the following month’s Winter Paralympics in Beijing, competitors from Russia and Belarus were not allowed to take part as neutrals after the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) was criticised for originally saying they could.

In September 2023, the IPC voted to lift the full ban and partially suspend the national Paralympic committees of Russia and Belarus. That decision was criticised by some international federations, including ParalympicsGB.

Russian athletes were barred from the 2016 Rio Paralympics over historic doping allegations before athletes were able to compete under a neutral flag and using the initials of the Russian Paralympic Committee at the 2018 Winter Games in Pyeongchang and Tokyo 2020.

Although what became known as the first Paralympics took place in Rome in 1960, the seeds of the Games were sown more than a decade earlier in Britain.

Sir Ludwig Guttman, a neurologist who was working with World War II veterans with spinal injuries at Stoke Mandeville Hospital in Aylesbury, began using sport as part of the rehabilitation programmes of his patients.

In 1948, he set up a competition with other hospitals to coincide with the London Olympics and over the next decade his sporting idea was adopted by other spinal injury units in Britain.

In 1960, 400 wheelchair athletes from 23 countries came to the Italian capital to compete in 57 medal events across eight sports at the ninth Annual International Stoke Mandeville Games, now regarded as the Rome 1960 Paralympic Games.

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