100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

Alexa Leary powers Australia to Paralympic gold three years after bike crash

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

‘Change for good’: cafe owner ditches single-use cups

Jam Espresso at UniSC Arena has gone single-use-cup free, introducing a reusable deposit-return system that is already preventing hundreds of cups from entering landfill. The More

Coast to host Maroons’ training and fan days

The Sunshine Coast is expected to be the perfect place for the Queensland men's and women's rugby league teams to hone their skills in More

Locals to comment on region’s liveability

Residents will help a local council plan for the future, by sharing their values in a liveability survey. Community members can now let Noosa Council More

Photo of the day: a flying start

Like many Sunshine Coast residents, photographer Prue Henschke visited family interstate over the summer. She captured this perspective of Mt Coolum as the plane prepared More

Starlink policy update sparks user concerns over AI

SpaceX has revised its Starlink privacy policy to allow the use of customer data for AI training, a shift ​that could bolster Elon Musk's More

Beach to snow: Meila’s set for Winter Olympics final

Sunshine Coast snowboarder Meila Stalker is set to compete in the final of the Big Air event at the Winter Olympics in Italy. The 22-year-old More

When the last Paralympic Games were on in Tokyo, Alexa Leary would have had little knowledge they were taking place as she recovered from a near-fatal bike crash.

Three years later, at Paris’s La Defense Arena, the Noosa athlete produced the anchor leg of her life to claim gold for Australia in the 34-point mixed 4x100m medley relay.

Trailing in fourth and 6.28 seconds behind leaders Netherlands when she replaced Emily Beecroft in the pool for the final leg, Leary careered through her first 50m to move Australia into second spot.

When the 23-year-old turned at the wall, she had cut the Dutch lead to 2.94 seconds.

And in the final stretch Leary moved past Thijs van Hofweggen to seal victory.

Jesse Aungles and Tim Hodge swam the opening legs, with Leary’s fellow Sunshine Coast teammate Callum Simpson, who attends Matthew Flinders Anglican College, and Keira Stephens, who performed in the heat, also earning a spot on the podium.

Related story: ‘Look out Paris’: miracle swimmer aims for Games

“I was watching us, and I was like, ‘come on, come on’ … I was like, ‘I’m going to have to weapon myself out here, we’ve got to take home the gold’,” Leary said.

“I knew I had to catch (van Hofweggen), I’m going to have to overtake him.

“I could see him, and I was like, ‘I just have to take this win’. I just had to.

“He was actually a bit in front of me at 15 metres, but I caught him. I just had to.”

Alex Leary has overcome significant obstacles.

The win netted Australia’s 12th swimming medal of the Games.

In the crowd to witness Leary’s first Paralympic gold medal were parents Russ and Belinda.

Not long before the Tokyo Games took place, doctors had informed Leary’s parents that they should prepare to say their goodbyes after their daughter fell off a bike while going at 70kmh near Pomona on the Sunshine Coast.

Once considered a promising triathlete, Leary spent several months in intensive care and returned to competitive sport through swimming.

Related story: A world of support to help get Lex moving again

Three years on, Leary defied the odds once more and clinched gold.

“I’m still in shock,” Beecroft said. “Coming into tonight, I knew it was going to be so close, but I was honestly not expecting to win.

“It’s unbelievable… She (Leary) was unbelievable.”

Meanwhile, Sunshine Coast cyclist Korey Boddington has claimed gold and bronze medals at the Paris Games.

Boddington won gold in the C4-5 1000m time trial over the weekend, setting a Paralympic record in his heat before edging out Britain’s Blaine Hunt in the final with a time of 1:01.650.

Maroochy RSL employee Liz Chapple with a photo of her Paralympian son Korey.

He then claimed bronze, alongside Gordon Allan and Alistair Donohoe, in the men’s C1-C5 mixed team sprint.

“If I worked as hard as I’m working now, I’d probably have been very good at school,” said Boddington, who’s nicknamed the Flying Burrito after his love of the food.

“This is unbelievable … I want to tell kids out there to go for their dreams and to fight for them. You’ve got to shoot for the stars.”

His mother Liz Chapple works at the Maroochy RSL, and musician Biggie Jay has penned a tribute to Boddington’s achievements and his unusual nickname.

Want more free local news? Follow Sunshine Coast News on Facebook, LinkedIn and Instagram, and sign up for our FREE daily news email.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share