National Post

Scientific study key to Rio for Paralympic jumper

- The Associated Press

FRANKFURT• Paralympic long jump champion Markus Rehm hopes a scientific study will clear him to compete at the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro by finding that he has no unfair advantage over able-bodied athletes by using his carbon-fibre prosthesis.

Rehm is hoping to compete both at the Olympics in August and at the Paralympic­s in September. To become eligible under internatio­nal rules, Rehm has to prove that his prosthesis gives him no advantage over athletes with a similar disability or non-amputee long jumpers.

Rehm could become the second athlete with a carbonfibr­e prosthesis to compete in the Olympics and the Paralympic­s after South Africa’s Oscar Pistorius in 2012.

The German Sport University in Cologne said it will conduct the study with the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology in Tokyo, the University of Colorado and a Japanese broadcaste­r. Results will be presented in June.

“They will measure and analyze data from Markus Rehm and similar calibre athletes to better understand his performanc­e and compare his performanc­e to that of non-amputee athletes,” the German sports University said Tuesday in a news release.

A new rule by the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s introduced last year leaves it to amputee competitor­s to prove their prosthesis does not put them in an advantage over ablebodied athletes. Rehm lost his lower right leg in a boating accident.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ MATT DUNHAM, FILE ?? Germany’s Markus Rehm hopes it will be proved his prosthesis offers him no competitiv­e advantage.
AP PHOTO/ MATT DUNHAM, FILE Germany’s Markus Rehm hopes it will be proved his prosthesis offers him no competitiv­e advantage.

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