Global Times

Curtain falls on Paralympic­s

Team USA ends up on top with 36 medals

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The Pyeongchan­g Winter Paralympic­s closed Sunday with a dazzling ceremony featuring light shows, dancing and music, as well as tributes to late wheelchair-bound British physicist Stephen Hawking as an “inspiratio­n.”

Nine days of sporting action ended earlier in the day with a flurry of events, including victory for the US in a hard-fought sledge hockey final, helping them to top the medals table with 36 overall.

North Korea’s athletes, who made their country’s Winter Paralympic­s debut in Pyeongchan­g, were absent from the closing ceremony after heading home early, but it was a minor sticking point after the rapid inter-Korean thaw of recent weeks.

With thousands packing out the Pyeongchan­g Olympic Stadium, Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee President Andrew Parsons used his closing address to pay tribute to Hawking, who died Wednesday aged 76.

The scientist is seen as an inspiratio­n by Paralympia­ns. He never let his acute physical disability stop him from pursuing his dreams, and is fondly remembered for opening the London 2012 Games.

Parsons hailed him as “a genius of a man, a pioneer and inspiratio­n to us all.”

“While Hawking tested the limits of his imaginatio­n, Paralympia­ns, you have once again pushed the boundaries of human endeavor,” he said.

“Your logic-defying performanc­es have focused the world not on what holds you back, but on what motivates you and pushes you forward.”

Hawking developed a form of motor neuron disease in his 20s that left him confined to a wheelchair, almost completely paralyzed and only able to speak through a voice synthesise­r.

But his disability did not stop him pursuing his ambition of unlocking the secrets of the universe, and his bestsellin­g book A Brief History of Time made him a household name.

In a memorable speech at the opening of the 2012 Games, Hawking urged Paralympia­ns to “look up at the stars and not down at your feet.”

Athletes carried their countries’ flags into the stadium at the closing ceremony but North Korea’s was brought in by a Games volunteer, after Pyongyang’s delegation headed home a few days ago.

Pyongyang sent two novice sit-skiers to the Games and they finished at or near the back of their two events, but were still welcomed by South Korean fans delighted at the latest sign of detente on the Korean Peninsula.

Sunday’s closing ceremony included traditiona­l Korean music and dancing, and also modern rock and pop, with K-pop star Ailee among the performers.

There were also disabled performers, including a dancer with a hearing impairment and a wheelchair-bound dancer.

Towards the end of the ceremony, the Paralympic flag was hauled down and handed to the mayor of Beijing – which will host the 2022 Winter Olympics and Paralympic­s.

In a fitting finale to the Games’ high-octane sporting action, the US earlier Sunday beat Canada 2-1 with a dramatic goal in overtime to defend their Paralympic sledge hockey title.

It brought Team USA’s gold medal haul to 13.

Russian athletes – competing as neutrals after their country was banned due to a doping scandal – picked up eight gold medals, second-highest after the US and tied with Canada.

 ??  ?? American Paralympia­n Declan Farmer in action during the ice hockey final game against Canada at the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Paralympic Winter Games on Sunday
American Paralympia­n Declan Farmer in action during the ice hockey final game against Canada at the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Paralympic Winter Games on Sunday

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