Michael Milton
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Michael Milton is an Australian Winter Paralympic skier. He lost a leg to bone cancer when he was at the age of nine. He grew up into a skiing family and after losing his leg he was determined to be able to ski again.
At the age of 14 he competed in the 1988 Winter Paralympic games in Innsbruck, Austria. There he achieved a 12th in the slalom, an 11th in the Giant Slalom and an 18th in the downhill. In the 1992 Winter Paralympic Games, in Albertville France Michael picked up gold medal in the Slalom, which was the first winter Olympic gold for Australia, Winter Paralympics or Winter Olympics. He also got silver in the Super G. From there on he got a medal in every event he competed in at every Winter Paralympics. In 2002 at the Salt Lake Winter Paralympics, he won every skiing event.
Since then, the rules for his category have changed. From 2006 onwards his category included anyone who could stand, whereas previously it had been people with only one leg. The 2006 Torino winter Paralympics were his last. In his career he has won 10 Paralympics medals (six gold, two silver and two bronze). His appearance at the 2006 Winter Paralympics was his fifth and final one, after which he focused more fully on speed skiing.
In April 2005, he was the first person with a disability to break the 200 kilometres per hour mark with a speed of 210.4 km/h. He then aimed to beat the Australian open record of 212.26 km/h, set in 1997 by able-bodied athlete Nick Kirshner. [1] On April 19, 2006, he became the fastest Australian speed skier - able-bodied or disabled - after setting a world record at 213.65km/h in France.
[edit] References
- "The Brave and the Bold" Alpha magazine, February 2006.
- ^ "Michael Milton - is there anything this man can't do?" - Australian Alpine News, Early Season 2006.