Sowetan

Paralympia­n Ntando Mahlangu planning ‘something special’

Superstar draws inspiratio­n from Rio experience

- By Kevin McCallum

At the 2016 Paralympic­s in Rio, Ntando Mahlangu, then just 14, bounced with giddy excitement on the podium on the two prosthetic legs that had not only won silver in the 200m, but told the story of those who had helped him get there.

The names of all those who played a part in him reaching the Games, just four years after he had learnt to walk after his decision to amputate his under-developed legs, were inscribed on the legs.

Five years later, Mahlangu is planning something similar for both the 200m and long jump events.

“Coming into these Games, I have done something special,” Mahlangu said from Tokyo yesterday.

“I have done something similar [to Rio] for my long jump blades and my 200m blades.

“There will be two different designs.

“I don’t want to spoil the surprise, but it is very special. I will share the story of the design after each event.”

Mahlangu is still a teenager, but feels his emotional growth has matched his physical developmen­t.

He is a Paralympic superstar, one of nine Paralympia­ns to be featured in Netflix documentar­y Rising Phoenix.

“As a person, I started to believe in myself a lot more. I’m also emotionall­y and mentally a lot stronger,” he said.

“The speed and the physicalit­y are very important, but what I have gone through has made me a better person than I was in 2016.

“I’ve worked on my strength and running style, but the first thing we had to do was to make sure I was emotionall­y right for the Games. “Having that, I feel a lot more confident going into the competitio­n. “The challenge of lockdown meant we could not go out to train.

“We didn’t know how to plan our training and competitio­n schedule because we did not know when the Games were going to happen or not happen.

“Having the team I had behind me back home made it easier. If the Games weren’t going to happen this year, our aim was to maintain and maintain and maintain.”

Mahlangu will compete in the long jump on Saturday and the 200m on September 3, where he will come up against Richard Whitehead, the dominant force in the 200m and the winner in Rio and London.

On Thursday, SA dressage rider Philippa Johnson-Dwyer celebrated returning for her fifth Paralympic­s, having overcome extraordin­ary odds during a testing 2020.

She was seventh in the grading and qualified for the individual test final, but just getting to the Tokyo Games for the two-time Paralympic gold medal and silver medal winner has taken some doing.

“About 10 months ago, I was diagnosed with endocardit­is and had to have open heart surgery. While doing tests, they found I had cancer.

“After the surgery I had to do five weeks of radiation and chemo, but that took me out of riding for seven months. but I have had the most exquisite team of people around me and they have all done everything in their power to get me here.

“It made me look at my priorities in life, the joy of being able just to walk my horse and not even ride it. It rekindled my passion all over again.”

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Ntando Mahlangu /
SUPPLIED Ntando Mahlangu /

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