Huddersfield Daily Examiner

PARALYMPIA­N HANNAH COCKCROFT TELLS WHY SHE IS PASSIONATE ABOUT DISABLED YOUNGSTERS GETTING A SPORTING CHANCE

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WITH no less than five world records, seven Paralympic gold medals and 12 world championsh­ip titles, Hannah Cockroft – one of Britain’s most successful athletes ever – is finally a little bit comfortabl­e with the role model label.

“I used to really hate it when people said, ‘Oh you’re my role model, you’re my inspiratio­n.’ I’d always think, ‘I’m just living my life!’

“But if all I’m doing is living my life and they see that as something to look up to, then actually that is a massive privilege,” says the 29-yearold wheelchair racer, who picked up two golds in Tokyo in her T34 category – the 800m and 100m, smashing her own world record in the process.

But that’s the thing about disability; people need to see it represente­d in every walk of life –from the racing track in major sporting events, to TV, film and media in an everyday way that doesn’t necessaril­y focus on the disability itself.

“I had a strange perception of my disability growing up, I didn’t know anyone else who had a disability until I was 12, so I just always saw myself as different and I didn’t really know why.

“I was never treated differentl­y, I lived in a very able-bodied world, I just struggled with a few things,” Hannah says.

She doesn’t remember ever seeing a wheelchair on TV – “Nothing! I never saw anyone with a disability and I was born in 1992!” – which really contribute­d to how she felt about her wheelchair growing up.

Her disability was caused by two cardiac arrests at birth which left her with brain damage, damage to her hips, legs and feet and issues with fine motor skills, balance and mobility.

“I hated my wheelchair – hated it,” she says, “because I felt it made me look different from my friends and family. You wouldn’t see me sitting here in it if I hadn’t have found sport, I would have walked here, I would have found a way.”

Those who’ve seen Hannah sprint around the track will be used to seeing her in a chair, but she can walk around her house and local town.

“I can’t walk for very long, or far, or quickly,” she explains. And as a child and teenager she tried to cope without a wheelchair at all.

“Actually, by avoiding my chair I took away my own independen­ce, and that’s what it is to me now – my independen­ce.

“I hope there are some kids out there who see that, and it helps them accept it. As much as society paints disability as the worst thing ever, it’s really not! You just have to find your coping mechanisms and accept that this is what you are and you can absolutely do everything if you just accept the help. My help was the chair.”

her gold medal

Now, she says, her chair feels like part of her – and starring in a Muller Light campaign felt like an important step in disability representa­tion.

“It was incredible. You’re seeing a wheelchair user in an advert, and it’s not about disability, it’s about ‘having it all’ – it’s about yoghurts!” Hannah smiles.

London 2012, Cockroft’s first Paralympic Games, helped boost the profile of para-athletics in the UK, and after the huge numbers in crowd support and the buzz around the Rio 2016 Paralympic Games, the delayed Tokyo 2020 event – with no crowds due to Covid restrictio­ns – was harder than she imagined. “We obviously knew there would be a lot of restrictio­ns, but when we got into the stadium it was absolutely silent. I thought I’d be ready for it, but I really, really wasn’t. Obviously there was nothing that could be done about it, but I don’t cry and I cried at the end of that race,” Hannah recalls. “You kind of do it for that buzz, and it just didn’t feel like the Games had happened, almost.”

It was tough – especially after five years of lead-up and a particular­ly hard year before it when the pandemic struck. “It’s scary when you see people like you dying [a significan­t percentage of people who died from Covid had disabiliti­es and underlying health conditions]. For a long time, me and Nathan [Maguire, her fellow wheelchair athlete boyfriend] didn’t leave the house.”

The pair met on a training camp ahead of Rio, although Hannah reveals with a laugh: “He actually says he met me in 2012, he’s got a picture of him asking for my autograph – I don’t remember, so I don’t count that as us meeting!”

Something Hannah is really passionate about is ensuring youngsters get access to sport if they have a disability.

“I still have kids tell me that they’re not allowed to do PE at school. If you don’t have the parental support or financial support [to visit a specialise­d club], if you’re also missing sport at school because you’ve got a disability, you’ve got no way in, and that’s what worries me,” she says.

“A race chair off the shelf costs between £3,000 and £5,000 – it’s not money that my mum and dad had. I was lucky, I borrowed a chair and that’s what most kids do now.”

But there are less than 15 wheelchair racing clubs in the UK, she says.

“I want to make it so you just go to your local club, get a race chair and give it a go,” says Hannah. “Even when I had my own race chair, I wasn’t allowed to push round with the runners – we need to change that.”

Hannah Cockroft MBE spoke on behalf of Muller Light

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 ?? ?? Hannah with
Hannah with
 ?? ?? CHANGED MINDSET: Hannah in the wheelchair she
once hated
CHANGED MINDSET: Hannah in the wheelchair she once hated

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