Sharpshooter’s sights on glory at Rio Games
Jason Eales was targeted for his sharpshooting. The 39-year-old South African moved to New Zealand six years ago and became a marked man. Paralympics New Zealand had Eales on its radar as a man capable of success.
And after shooting for five years, two of those competitively, Eales fired himself onto the international scene with an individual bronze and team gold medal at last year’s International Paralympic Committee World Cup in Sydney.
That success earned him a place at this year’s Paralympic Games in Rio.
New Zealand will have three para-shooters in Rio, with Eales joining Christchurch’s Greg Reid, 54, and legendary Auckland shooter, Michael Johnson, 42, who’s won a host of World Cup events as well as two bronze medals at the Paralympics in 2012 and 2008, in London and Beijing.
Johnson won a gold medal in Athens in 2004, in the R4 10m Air
Rifle event, and set a world record score for the Mixed 10m Air Rifle in Poland last year.
Eales has come a long way since his first international competition in Croatia last year, where he finished 10th in the R5 10m Air Rifle Prone event.
‘‘Paralympics NZ contacted me through my interest in going to the international games and world cups,’’ he said.
‘‘There was a big process I had to do first to get my NZ citizenship, which they helped me out with based on previous track record in competitions.’’
He’s originally from Pietermaritzburg, just west of Durban, and when his parents emigrated to New Zealand in 2010, he decided to follow later that year.
Cycling was always something Eales had a keen interest in, and he initially looked at taking up para-cycling before he pursued his career in para-shooting.
While riding up a hill in his hometown in 1994, Eales suffered a crash that left him with a cracked skull and three crushed vertebrae at the top of his spine. The accident caused him to have partial tetraplegia.
He was in a hospital bed for weeks, already starting to think about his fight to recover.
Eales walked out of hospital five months after his accident. He’s still recovering to this day and slowly progressing and improving.
‘‘I just get on and do it. There’s nothing really too hard I can’t do. I just get on with it,’’ he said.
Eales lives in Hamilton and works as a software test analyst. His desire to compete in sport has never diminished, and he first approached Parafed Waikato in 2012 when he eventually settled on shooting after trying other parasports.