
The nation has a new sweetheart. She is 17 years old, swims very swiftly, has a smile to light up a city, and her name is Ellie Simmonds.
Last night, in the bedlam of the Olympic Aquatics Centre, she contested one of the greatest, most compelling races that modern sport has seen.
And in winning gold and breaking a world record, she single-handedly ensured the success of London’s Paralympic Games.

Ellie, who is afflicted by dwarfism, was already the poster girl of the Games, following her two gold medals four years ago as the youngest British athlete in Beijing.
Back then, she beguiled the country with her charm, her pluck, her unfailing modesty.
But the manner of her victory over controversial American rival Victoria Arlen in the S6 400m freestyle moves her into new territory.
Arlen, 17, made the final only after a last-minute reprieve granted her permission to take part in the S6 category.

She was originally ruled ‘ineligible’ because her paralysis was not deemed severe enough.
It was a race torn from history’s pages, as unpredictable as it was dramatic.
Arlen set a daunting early tempo, seeking to break the field.
Length by length, the competition fell away. Only Ellie remained, clinging to the pace, refusing to be discarded, revealing the courage that champions possess.

She timed her effort to perfection, drawing level at the final turn, then pulling away with improbable energy, her arms churning the water like an outboard motor.
She moved clear through the stunning clamour, in a moment to match the triumph of Mo Farah a few Saturdays ago.
And as she touched, with a second to spare, a whole range of emotions flickered across her face; agony, exhaustion, bewilderment, exaltation.
It was a moment she will never forget, and neither will the nation which celebrated it.
It was Britain’s fifth gold medal of a tumultuous day, a day which did more for Paralympic sport than any this country has known.

In addition to the wonderful Ellie, there were cycling golds for the husband and wife pair, Barney and Sarah Storey, for Natasha Baker in the individual dressage in Greenwich Park, and for Richard Whitehead in the 200m on the athletics track.
The nation’s appetite and support for the Paralympics has exceeded every forecast.
Once again yesterday morning, 80,000 people turned up at the main stadium to watch sports they barely understood and athletes of whom they may never have heard.
As a demonstration of how dearly the British prize their sport as well as their sportsmen and women, it has never been equalled.






source: dailymail
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