Stefanie Reid

Stefanie Reid
Medal record
Track and field (T44)
Competitor for  Canada
Paralympic Games
2008 Beijing 200m - T44
Paralympic World Cup
2008 Manchester 200m - T44
Competitor for  United Kingdom[1]
Paralympic Games
2012 London Long Jump - F44
IPC World Championships
2011 Christchurch Long Jump - F44
2011 Christchurch 200 m - T44
IPC European Championships
2014 Swansea Long jump - T44
Paralympic World Cup
2012 Manchester 200 m - T44
2010 Manchester 200 m - T44
2012 Manchester 100 m - T44
Disability Athletics Challenge
2010 London Long Jump - F44
Grand Prix
2010 London 100m - T44

Stefanie 'Stef' Reid (born 26 October 1984)[2] is a track and field Paralympian who competes for Great Britain, competing mainly in category T44 sprint events.

Born in New Zealand to British parents (Scottish father, English mother),[3] the family moved to Toronto, Canada when she was aged 4.[4] Reid lost her right foot in a boating accident, aged 16;[3] her life was saved by a surgeon in Toronto who managed to stem the blood flow through amputation.

Sports-loving before the accident, she played rugby union, but encountered difficulties after her amputation with referees who felt the artificial leg could injure other players. Deciding to concentrate on her studies, she gained a full scholarship to Queen's University to study biochemistry. After joining the campus track and field team, three years later she competed at the World Championships.[4]

Competing for Canada in the 2008 Summer Paralympics in Beijing, China, she won a bronze medal in the women's 200 metres - T44 event, went out in the first round of the women's 100 metres - T44 event and finished fifth in the women's Long jump - F44 event.[4] She switched allegiance to Great Britain at the start of 2010.[5]

In 2010, BBC presenter and producer Matthew Stadlen spent a day with Reid for the news programme The Road With... A Paralympian.

Reid, and husband Canadian wheelchair racer Brent Lakatos, live in England and train at Loughborough University [6]

In April 2013, it was announced that Reid would feature in the latest campaign for British high-street store Debenhams,[7][8] the first high street chain to use disabled models in its campaigns.[9] Reid's photo was featured in British Vogue magazine in April 2013. The imagery celebrates diversity in the retail sector.[10]

Reid attempted to qualify to represent Scotland in the able-bodied long jump at the 2014 Commonwealth Games, however she did not manage to meet the qualifying standard of 6.2 metres, although she did set a new world record for the T44 class at the Sainsbury's Glasgow Grand Prix (5.47m) whilst attempting to qualify.[11]

Despite not qualifying for the Commonwealth Games, Reid won gold at the IPC European Championships in Swansea, seeing off the challenge of main rival and former world record holder, France's Marie Amelie Le Fur by four centimetres.


References

  1. Stefanie Reid - Power of 10 Power of 10. Retrieved 18-08-2014.
  2. "Stefanie Reid". Channel4. Retrieved 2010-12-06.
  3. 1 2 Lisa Adams (28 September 2010). "I'm desperate to win a gold medal for Scotland at London 2012, says paralympian Stefanie Reid". Daily Record. Retrieved 2010-12-06.
  4. 1 2 3 "Stefanie Reid Interview". UK Athletics. 17 August 2010. Retrieved 2010-12-06.
  5. "Paralympian Reid switches to GB". BBC News. 19 January 2010. Retrieved 2010-12-06.
  6. About Stef Reid
  7. London, Bianca (5 April 2013). "Meet the stars of the new Debenhams campaign". Daily Mail. Retrieved 5 April 2013.
  8. "The new shape of high street fashion". London Evening Standard. 5 April 2013
  9. The Sun
  10. Vogue Magazine
  11. "Stef's leap of faith". Evening Times. 28 June 2014. Retrieved 11 July 2014.

External links

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