By Sportswriter Gao Peng
BEIJING, Sept. 10 (Xinhua) -- It's physical function
that set the participants in the Paralympics apart from their counterparts at
the Olympics. But that doesn't mean disabled people cannot match the achievement
of able-bodied Olympic stars.
U.S. swimmer Erin Popovich, who stands 1.34 meters
tall, snared her third gold medal of the Beijing Paralympics Tuesday evening
with a world-record time of 1:31.60 in the women's SB7 100m breaststroke.
The 23-year-old is often referred to as "the
Paralympic Michael Phelps", but it seems more accurate to pin a nickname on
Phelps: "the Olympic Popovich."
In the Athens Olympics in 2004, Phelps came up one
short of matching Mark Spitz's 1972 gold medal haul, while Popovich went 7-for-7
in five individual events and two relays in the ensuing Paralympics.
"The best thing about the Paralympic Games is that
stereotypes are dispelled," said Popovich. "You see someone in a wheelchair or
with a certain disability and instead of dwelling on their problems, you see
they are focused on what they can achieve. I'm blown away by their
abilities."
Popovich is not an exception at the Paralympics. More
than 4,000 disabled athletes from around the world competing here want to be
recognized - win or lose - for their sporting achievements.
South African sensation Oscar Pistorius started his
quest for three gold medals on a winning note as the double amputee, using a
pair of carbon-fiber prosthetic legs, overcame a slow start to win the men's
TT44 100m sprint in 11.17 seconds Tuesday night at the Bird's Nest stadium.
Pistorius was born without his fibula, the smaller of
the two bones in the lower legs, and when he was 11 months old both limbs were
amputated below the knee.
The 21-year-old had sought to compete in last month's
Beijing Olympics but eventually failed to reach the qualifying standard.
Pistorius said had it not been for the legal case
with the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) -- which
ruled the J-shaped blades gave him an advantage over able-bodied athletes -- he
might have qualified for the Olympics.
However, Pistorius insisted that in no way he
considered topping the Paralympic podium a consolation prize for missing out on
the Olympics.
"I never think that the Paralympics is a second class
event," he said.
"Coming to the Paralympics, the competition is always
strong and it's a world class event. It's on the same stage as the Olympics and
it's something I'm very proud to be a part of."
Pistorius' comptriot Natalie du Toit, who led the
South African Paralympic delegation at the opening ceremony last Sturday night,
is, by no means, inferior to Olympians.
The first female amputee to compete in an able-bodied
Olympics, du Toit finished 16th among 25 competitors in the 10-kilometer
open-water swim last month at the Beijing Games, which disappointed her but was
a marvelous achievement to anyone else.
"She's not just an inspiration to open-water swimmers
and not just to sportsmen," British silver medalist Keri-Anne Payne said after
the race, "but to anybody in the whole world that you can do anything you
want."
Du Toit, who lost her lower left leg in a motorcycle
accident in 2001, won five golds and a silver in the Athens Paralympics. Again,
she will try for five golds in Beijing.
"It's not about being disabled or able-bodied -- it's
all the same to me," she said. "I just get up and I race."