30th August 2024
Weir leads opening day at Paris 2024 as three qualify for finals
David Weir brushed off his memories of Tokyo to qualify third fastest for the T54 5000m final at his seventh Paralympic Games in Paris.
Weir (Jenny Archer, Weir Archer Academy) did not qualify for the final at Tokyo 2020, finishing eighth in his heat but bounced back in style at the Stade de France, winning his heat.
It was a composed performance for the 45-year-old, holding off a late charge from Thailand’s Saichon Konjen and crossing the line for first, banishing the doubts he revealed had been flooding his head in recent days.
“I had a few demons in my head the last couple of days because of what happened in Tokyo but I just sad to focus on my ability and the times I’ve done this year and have confidence in myself,” he said.
Cruising through in style 💪
David Weir qualifies third fastest for tomorrow’s T54 5000m final in a time 11:17.91 👏
Daniel Sidbury receives a DNF in heat one.#Paris2024 | #Athletics | #WhereItStarts pic.twitter.com/TZB5gI7xJY
— British Athletics (@BritAthletics) August 30, 2024
“It’s not easy getting back up to number two in the world in the 5,000m. I’m in shape but I’ve had a long season already and quite tired.
“I’m happy, I just needed to get that race out of the way and I can now focus on the rest of the Games.”
Earlier that day Zac Shaw (Leon Baptiste, Cleethorpes) pipped Brazil’s Kelsey Teodoro to reach the showpiece event by just 0.01 seconds at the Stade de France, making it count when it mattered.
And having initially been told that he had finished second in France, it was an unexpected surprise for the sprinter when he heard he was through to the final in one of the automatic qualifying spots with a time of 11.15 secs.
“I guess one of the things about being visually impaired is that you can’t see the screen so I got told I had come second,” he said.
“It wasn’t until someone said ‘congratulations you’ve made the final’ that I realised.
“I asked them to read the scoreboard three or four times to make sure. I’m really proud of myself for the journey I’ve been on.
Final booked 💪
It’s a photo finish for Zac Shaw who wins his T12 100m heat to seal his place in tomorrow’s final!#Paris2024 | #Athletics | #WhereItStarts pic.twitter.com/tHQFrq8v5y
— British Athletics (@BritAthletics) August 30, 2024
“It’s almost sweeter that I only made the final by one hundredth because it just shows that I’ve really had to work for this.”
Eden Rainbow-Cooper ((Jenny Archer, Weir Archer Academy) joined Shaw with heat success in the women’s T54 5000m, finishing fifth in a stacked heat to qualify for tomorrow’s final.
The 23-year-old pulled a gutsy early few laps to put herself in contention and tire out the competition, holding on for the final automatic qualification spot on Paralympic debut.
“I don’t have the same acceleration at the end as some of the other girls so I had a bold tactic to go out hard for a couple of laps and see if a gap opened which it didn’t and then they all shot past me,” she said.
Two out of two this morning✌️
Eden Rainbow-Cooper makes it safely through to the women’s T54 5000m final tomorrow.
She clocks a time of 12:23.53 on her Paralympic debut ✨#Paris2024 | #Athletics | #WhereItStarts pic.twitter.com/2W0HUd2z0M
— British Athletics (@BritAthletics) August 30, 2024
“It took enough out of the girls that it gave me a better chance so I’m pretty happy with how I executed it.
“I feel good, the final is tomorrow and we will see what happens with that and building into the marathon.”
Daniel Sidbury (Christine Parsloe, Sutton & District) received a DNF in the men’s T54 5000m after pulling off the track with a lap to go.