Amanda Fraser

Amanda Fraser
Personal information
Nationality  Australia
Born 10 September 1981 (1981-09-10) (age 30)

Amanda Fraser (born 10 September 1981) is a paralympic athlete from Australia. She has cerebral palsy and competes in the F37 category for the physically impaired. Competing in the 2000, 2004, and 2008 Summer Paralympics, she won two silver and two bronze medals, and in the 2006 World Championships, she won a gold and a silver medal. In the 2006 championships, she set a world record for discus in her classification, and was named 2006 Telstra Female AWD Athlete of the Year by Athletics Australia.[1]

Career

Fraser was born with spastic hemiplegia, a form of cerebral palsy where one side of the body is affected.[2] At the age of 12, she competed in the Queensland School Sports Athletics Championships and won three gold medals.[3] She later moved on to swimming, and was selected to complete in the 2000 Summer Paralympics in Sydney, where she won bronze medals in the 4×100 m Freestyle 34-point relay and the S7 50 m Freestyle.[2]

In 2001, she returned to athletics, and qualified for the 2004 Summer Paralympics with a world-record discus throw of 27.95 m at the national championships. At the Paralympics, she competed in the 100 m, shot-put, and discus events, winning a silver medal in the F37 discus classification, Australia's first medal in athletics at the event.[2][4]

She competed in the 2006 International Paralympic Committee World Championships, where she broke the F37 discus world record with a throw of 29.93 metres, winning the gold medal at the event. Following this achievement, she was named the 2006 Telstra Female Athlete with a Disability of the Year by Athletics Australia.[1]

At the 2008 Paralympic Games in Beijing, Fraser was initially awarded the bronze medal for the discus in the combined F37-38 event; however, she was given the silver medal when British athlete Rebecca Chin was disqualified on the basis that technically she is an amputee and was therefore ineligible to compete in the cerebral palsy category.[5] It was initially reported by ABC News that Fraser refused to shake Chin's hand after the event,[5] however this was later corrected by The Australian when it was found that it was not Fraser who refused to shake hands, but British athlete Beverly Jones.[6]

References

External links