Sunderland Echo

Team GB claim wheelchair basketball bronze on final day of Tokyo Games

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Bronze for Great Britain in basketball and badminton brought down the curtain on a medal-laden campaign at the Tokyo Paralympic­s.

GB finished as runners-up in the overall table for the second successive Games following a total of 124 podium places: 41 gold ,38 silver and 45 bronze.

The men’s wheelchair basketball team clinched the country’s penultimat­e medal in Japan by defeating Spain 6858 in their third-place play-off.

Gaz Choudhry – who has been coaching the team after head coach Haj Bhania tested positive for Covid-19 prior to departure to Japan – was once again GB’s top scorer, registerin­g 19 points, with Terry Bywater adding 14.

“All we’ve done with this medal is validate this team to the outside, but for us internally, we were validated already ,” said Choudhry.

“This bronze medal is for everyone else. We know where we were but, now we’ve won it, it definitely feels more than a bronze.

“It was the collective identity of this group. We’ve had so many knock backs all summer. Were lied on that experience of being resilient and being courageous.”

Krysten Coombs then had the final say with the shuttlecoc­k.

He bounced back from Saturday’s semi-final loss to second seed Krishna Nagar by coming from a game down to beat Brazil’s Vitor Goncalves Tavares 12-21 21-10 21-16 in the SH6 bronze medal match.

“It’s a dream come true. To be able to come away from these amazing Games with a bronze medal, it’s just unreal,” said Coombs.

“It’s an awesome sport as you can see, and there’s so many opportunit­ies with it as well.

“I’d like to think I can inspireoth­er kids with dwarfism at home, that there is a journey and you can be successful with it.”

Earlier, six-time Paralympic gold medallist David Weir finished fifth in the men’s T54 marathon in a season’s best time of one hour, 29 minutes and 45 seconds.

Fellow Briton Johnboy Smith was 10 thin 1:32:25, while compatriot Derek Rae crossed the line ninth in the T46 race in 2:47:04.

Switzerlan­d’s Marcel Hug won the T54 event in a time of 1:24:02, 20 seconds ahead of Chinese athlete Zhang Yong, with American Daniel Romanchuk third.

Weir said: “I’ve gone under 1:30 which I haven’t done for a few years, so I’m pleased with that.”

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