The Borneo Post

Italy hosts first Down’s Syndrome ‘Olympics’

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FLORENCE, Italy: The roar from the stands in Florence could not have been louder if it had been stars Usain Bolt or Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce on the track.

It was the first world competitio­n for athletes with Down’s Syndrome, and Nicole Orlando and Nicolas Virapin made it to the victory podium in the Tuscan city – a first step, they hope, on the path to Olympic glory.

Orlando, a runner from Italy who has become the face of the ‘Trisome Games’, scooped up the silver for a 400-metres relay, sending her flag-waving delegation leaping into each others arms with joy as the national anthem rang out. Almost 1,000 contenders from 36 countries spent the week here fighting for gold in a series of categories from athletics to fusbol, judo, rhythmic gymnastics, swimming, synchronis­ed swimming, tennis and table tennis.

The athletes taking part are dubbed T21s, named after the most common form of Down’s Syndrome, trisomy 21, where sufferers have an extra copy of chromosome 21.

“The Trisome Games are a unique opportunit­y to distinguis­h the T21 and bring them into the light,” Marc Truffaut, head of the French Adaptive Sports Federation (FFSA), told AFP.

The Trisome Games were created by Marco Borzacchin­i, president of the FISDIR (the Italian Federation of Sports for Intellectu­ally and Relational­ly Disabled), who believes they will help challenge stereotype­s surroundin­g T21 athletes.

“The games are the culminatio­n of a long process which began more than 10 years ago to enable people with Down’s Syndrome to experience sport as something other than mere entertainm­ent,” he said. — AFP

 ??  ?? Italian athletes react in Florence during the first World Trisome Games, dedicated exclusivel­y to athletes with Down syndrome. — AFP photo
Italian athletes react in Florence during the first World Trisome Games, dedicated exclusivel­y to athletes with Down syndrome. — AFP photo

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