Wokingham Today

Sophie sets sights on 2024 Games

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“It says a lot about the team that I have created that I am instantly looking on to Paris 2024; whereas, in 2016, I was so miserable even with my success that I was contemplat­ing retiring,” she wrote on social media.

She told Wokingham Today on Tuesday that her misery after the 2016 Rio games, despite her three gold medals there, related to the team around her at home at the time.

Sophie is a battler on many fronts. She wants more awareness of athletes’ mental health – a cause at the Olympic Games. “It’s still rather a taboo subject. In an elite sport [mental health] is still seen as a weakness.

“People see me as a very smiley person…[But] you put your heart and soul into this sport. It’s really tough [though] we do have psychologi­sts and other help,” she said.

Sophie says her sport needs more funding and other support. She hopes Tokyo will show the standard of horses and coaching needed and that the British equestrian community and others will support para-dressage riders more, like they do for able-bodied teams.

Finding the right horse for Tokyo was incredibly tough. “If you have my Paris horse sitting in your field, or would like to join the journey as an owner, or would like to help the other talented young para-riders

I mentor, hit me up,” she asked.

“I’m relying on finding the right horse I can afford [for Paris]. It might not happen.” The horse needs to be a stunner.

A suitable one would cost at least £50,000, much more expensive than ten to 20 years ago. Keeping her horses cost £3,000 a month. “If only I was a swimmer,” she joked.

She has launched Sophie’s Gold Club with membership at £25 a year, giving: “A unique experience into the world of para-sport via personal updates, yard visits, behind the scenes access on competitio­n days, discounts with associated sponsors” and other benefits.

Visit www.sophiechri­stiansen. co.uk/goldclub to join.

Sophie believes athletes benefit mentally from having jobs as well as doing their training.

She is a software developer at investment bank Goldman Sachs for two days a week.

On BBC Radio 4 on Sunday, she pleaded for fairness for disabled people, saying she couldn’t get into her local corner shop because it had a step. She hoped the Paralympic­s would inspire people to accept other challenges.

And she complained that there was no British Sign Language interprete­r when Prime Minister Boris Johnson gave Covid announceme­nts: “If the government doesn’t comply with the Equality Act, we have no hope,” she said.

After Sophie’s earlier Paralympic success, All Saints School created the Sophie Christians­en award for sporting endeavour which she presented for the first time.

Sophie has been awarded the CBE for services to paraequest­rianism and she won a Women of the Future Award for her “ferocious determinat­ion to succeed”.

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