Derby Telegraph

Jack is inspired by Ellie to go for gold in Tokyo

SHEPHARD IS FAVOURITE TO

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ELLIE Simmonds has been an inspiratio­n for Chesterfie­ld’s Jack Shephard.

Shephard was 11 when he watched Simmonds, also born with dwarfism and only two years older than him, win her first Paralympic gold in the pool at Beijing 2008.

Like a lightning bolt, it hit a boy who swam, played football, table tennis and basketball, helping him decide: ‘I can do that.’

“I saw the emotion that Ellie put into her sport and I can picture it even now,” said Shephard, world number one in badminton’s SH6 category.

“I’m a lot older now but it was the first time I’d seen anything like it.

“As a badminton player, I was inspired by players like Lin Dan and Lee Chong Wei but Ellie inspired me with the work she put in and I really looked up to her.

“I’m hoping when I win my first gold medal, it will be as amazing a feeling as it was for her.”

Simmonds and Shephard regularly met at events and competitio­ns organised by the Dwarf Sports Associatio­n, a charity that has received funding from the National Lottery that aims to make sport accessible for those with restricted growth.

The 24-year-old will join his hero – and now close friend – as part of Paralympic­sGB in Tokyo, with parabadmin­ton added to the Games programme for the first time.

Simmonds had a hand in guiding his fortunes from a distance more than a decade ago but has taken a more active role ahead of Shephard’s Paralympic debut.

“Being a new sport, I haven’t got any team-mates who have done a Paralympic­s before,” said Shephard.

“I’ve spoken to Ellie about her experience­s and she passed on advice to put me in a better place. She said it was just about treating it like any tournament I normally go to, keeping your head level and not getting too overwhelme­d by what’s happening.”

Shephard picked up a racket for the first time aged 10 at a Dwarf Sports Associatio­n event, drawn in by the fast-paced sport where no two games are the same.

He also loved the fact that – unlike football, where he always had to play in goal – across the net he was on equal terms with the competitio­n.

Shephard is a two-time world champion, a favourite for Paralympic gold and one of over 1,000 elite athletes supported by National Lottery funding to train full time and benefit from world class facilities, technology, coaching and support teams. However, Shephard still recalls with relish the feeling of beating those who thought they were in for an easy ride.

“Of course people would underestim­ate me,” he said.

“People looked at me in a different way, they would think playing me was going to be easy and then they find out my ability and what I can do with the racket. That definitely surprises them.

“It gives you satisfacti­on when people think they’re going to beat you, then you smash them and you think ‘you shouldn’t have counted your chickens.’”

Once he’d been playing for a couple of years, his grandfathe­r David, a big influence, told him that before his knees packed up he also went to a local badminton club.

It was as if David waited until his grandson took it seriously to tell him.

“Knowing he went to a badminton club, even if it was only once or twice a week, it still feels good that I play a sport that he was into when he was younger,” said Shephard, who has seen the fortunes of Paralympic­sGB transform over the past two decades thanks to National Lottery funding.

Shephard has seen his own rapid rise coincide with a big bang moment for his sport.

The para-badminton and nondisable­d World Championsh­ips were held in parallel for the first time in 2019 and a growth in internatio­nal competitio­n saw it added for Tokyo 2020.

Shephard is the dominant force in SH6, winning back-to-back world titles in 2017 and 2019, and European gold in 2018. He will have a target on his back in Tokyo but whether he truly feels it or not, still plays with the spirit of an outsider.

“I can put my hands up and say in qualifying year, I didn’t win every tournament,” he said.

“There are other players in the category now and it’s so strong, there are so many guys to keep fighting.

“Although I’m still ranked world number one, I’ve spent most of my career trying to climb. I still keep that same mindset that I’m not at the top, I’ve got to work harder than the person alongside me, my closest rivals and competitor­s, to beat them.

“I always try to play them as if I’m in the underdog, mentally, so I can perform well when I’m out there because I’ve been in that position for so long.”

One of Shephard’s closest rivals will be fellow Brit Krysten Coombs, ranked number five in the world, with the pair playing in the final of the 2017 World Championsh­ips.

Coombs didn’t qualify automatica­lly with Shephard ahead of him but has been given a place at the Paralympic­s after a bipartite applicatio­n came down in his favour.

No one does more to support our Olympic and Paralympic athletes than National Lottery players, who raise around £36m each week for good causes including grassroots and elite sport. Discover the positive impact playing the National Lottery has at www.lotterygoo­dcauses.org.uk and get involved by using the hashtags: #TNLAthlete­s #MakeAmazin­gHappen

 ?? MAIN PIC: IMAGECOMMS. ?? Chesterfie­ld’s Jack Shephard will make his Paralympic debut in Tokyo. Inset: Ellie Simmonds.
MAIN PIC: IMAGECOMMS. Chesterfie­ld’s Jack Shephard will make his Paralympic debut in Tokyo. Inset: Ellie Simmonds.

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