website statistics
Jump to content
  • Register/Login on Totallympics!

    Sign up to Totallympics to get full access to our website.

     

    Registration is free and allows you to participate in our community. You will then be able to reply to threads and access all pages.

     

    If you encounter any issues in the registration process, please send us a message in the Contact Us page.

     

    We are excited to see you on Totallympics, the home of Olympic Sports!

     

Summer Paralympic Games 2016 Official Thread


Recommended Posts

1 hour ago, Nickyc707 said:

The difference between India and China is that the former is a democracy  with other social and economic priorities, while the latter is a one party state which is able to direct it's resources in whatever direction it chooses in order to project itself in the world.

 

According to China's own journal the Beijing Review  the country has 85 million disabled people which is more than the entire populations of most of the world's nation states. This vast pool enables them to compete in almost every Paralympic class in each sport which other countries cannot do. China did very well. My only point is that it should not be surprising given the massive advantage they enjoy and it certainly isn't amazing as you described it.  :cool:

 

What is sad is that back in the bad old days in China under Mao's rule, paraplegic persons were either hidden away or disposed of. Probably just like many countries then and even now. It's rather ironic that they've salvaged a somewhat terrible Olympics from their able bodied athletes. 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/339-summer-paralympic-games-2016-official-thread/page/52/#findComment-54879
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Nickyc707 said:

The difference between India and China is that the former is a democracy  with other social and economic priorities, while the latter is a one party state which is able to direct it's resources in whatever direction it chooses in order to project itself in the world.

 

According to China's own journal the Beijing Review  the country has 85 million disabled people which is more than the entire populations of most of the world's nation states. This vast pool enables them to compete in almost every Paralympic class in each sport which other countries cannot do. China did very well. My only point is that it should not be surprising given the massive advantage they enjoy and it certainly isn't amazing as you described it.  :cool:

 

Looks like our standards when it comes to what is amazing is different. The fact that my country of 100 million people only won one bronze in these games is already amazing for me, it surely wouldn't hurt if I see China getting 107 gold medals in this paralympics edition as an amazing feat. 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/339-summer-paralympic-games-2016-official-thread/page/52/#findComment-54889
Share on other sites

Just like the Olympics, our Paralympics were a great succes as well with 2 medals more than expected.

We're not even close to our best, but of course the competition is getting stronger for each olympiad...

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/339-summer-paralympic-games-2016-official-thread/page/52/#findComment-54903
Share on other sites

for Egypt , this was the worst achieved results in Paralympics , since Seoul 88 , but i can't say it was failure , unfortunately this's our level in paralympics now with a great decline in athletics the most important sport here according to the amount of medals given at , the biggest highlight for Egyptian delegation was the return of our sitting volleyball team to the medals ceremony after Athens 04 , they've been amazing and defeated one of the strongest teams nowadays Brazil home twice , also Germany , but again we're still not competitive to the 2 power horses of sport Iran and Bosnia  

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/339-summer-paralympic-games-2016-official-thread/page/52/#findComment-55028
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, bestmen said:

why don't you close this thread !!!!

 

Why should every thread of every finished event be closed !!!!! 

 

 

:redcard:

.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/339-summer-paralympic-games-2016-official-thread/page/52/#findComment-55066
Share on other sites

Just now, heywoodu said:

 

Why should every thread of every finished event be closed !!!!! 

 

 

:redcard:

 

this thread is glued in the top for nothing

 

there are many new competitions , this one is dead

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/339-summer-paralympic-games-2016-official-thread/page/52/#findComment-55068
Share on other sites

57 minutes ago, bestmen said:

 

this thread is glued in the top for nothing

 

there are many new competitions , this one is dead

 

Oh so you used the wrong words :d

 

It shouldn't be "glued" at the top anymore, but obviously there's no problem in keeping the thread open. 

.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/339-summer-paralympic-games-2016-official-thread/page/52/#findComment-55072
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, heywoodu said:

 

Oh so you used the wrong words :d

 

It shouldn't be "glued" at the top anymore, but obviously there's no problem in keeping the thread open. 

in or at , this language of teletubbies 6f70ca207affc848d41bedb02a1f90a8.gif

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/339-summer-paralympic-games-2016-official-thread/page/52/#findComment-55094
Share on other sites

Em 9/19/2016 at 17:50, Nickyc707 disse:

The difference between India and China is that the former is a democracy  with other social and economic priorities, while the latter is a one party state which is able to direct it's resources in whatever direction it chooses in order to project itself in the world.

 

I believe most (if not all) of us are aware of the many difficulties India goes through, and sport -- even for able-bodied persons -- does not seem to be a priority for the government. However, their population is around 1 billion and 300 million people. Based on this absolutely humongous number of people alone, it is puzzling that India's athletes still fall behind at the world stage. It's impossible for me to think that all Indian athletes are absolutely deprived of good facilities and coaches. Also, it's impossible for me to think that no private companies decide to sponsor individual athletes. We have seen some incredible performances from a very poor nation like Kenya, so why does India still struggle so hard? Money is not the only deciding factor, and politics is definitely not the only reason for success.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/339-summer-paralympic-games-2016-official-thread/page/52/#findComment-55131
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Posts around Totallympics

    • lost to     Well I know mixed doubles is unpredictable, but I have no words.... 
    • Yesterday's newspaper had the headline "Trump surrenders to Iran"  Judd Trump 12-13 Hossain Vafei  
    • Sabalenka upset by Hailey Baptiste  in the QF of the Madrid Open! 
    • Wednesday April 29th, 2026 Knockout Round Day 1 Schedule     Relegation Game Central European Summer Time (GMT +2)   Germany  vs  Norway Period-by-Period: April 29th 2026, h. 10:00, Pavol Demitra Ice Hockey Stadium, Trencin     Quarterfinals Central European Summer Time (GMT +2)   Czechia  vs Finland Period-by-Period: April 29th 2026, h. 12:00, Vladimir Dzurilla Ice Arena, Bratislava   Canada  vs  Sweden Period-by-Period: April 29th 2026, h. 14:00, Pavol Demitra Ice Hockey Stadium, Trencin   United States  vs  Latvia Period-by-Period: April 29th 2026, h. 16:00, Vladimir Dzurilla Ice Arena, Bratislava   Slovakia  vs  Denmark Period-by-Period: April 29th 2026, h. 18:00, Pavol Demitra Ice Hockey Stadium, Trencin
    • Wednesday April 29th, 2026 - Round-Robin Day 1 Schedule (GMT +8)   12:30   Spain vs Estonia 16:00   Netherlands vs Romania 19:30   China vs South Korea
    • Tuesday April 28th, 2026 - Round-Robin Day 3 Results (GMT +3)   12:30   Lithuania  3 - 1  South Korea 16:00   Italy  0 - 4  France 19:30   Austria  7 - 4  Estonia   Provisional Standing After Day 3:   1.    9 ----------------- 2.   6 3.   6 4.   3 5.   3 ----------------- 6.   0
    • 2025-26 PSA Tour Copper Level STARR Bermuda Open - Devonshire   Results (April 14-18, 2026)   Men's: 1. Miguel Rodriguez   2. Kareem El-Torkey   3. Nicholas Spizzirri   3. Leandro Romiglio     Women's: 1. Lucy Turmel 2. Sabrina Sobhy    3. Nadine Shahin   3. Haya Ali     Results     2025-26 PSA Tour Bronze Level Sportwerk Hamburg Open - Hamburg   Results (April 15-19, 2026)   Men's: 1. Aly Abou Eleinen 2. Youssef Soliman 3. Fares Dessouky   3. Baptiste Masotti     Women's: 1. Jasmine Hutton 2. Nele Gilis 3. Salma Hany   3. Melissa Alves     Results     2025-26 PSA Tour Gold Level Grasshopper Cup - Zurich   Results (April 21-26, 2026)   Men's: 1. Karim Gawad 2. Victor Crouin 3. Diego Elias   3. Joel Makin   5. Mohamed Abouelghar   5. Abhay Singh   5. Iker Pajares   5. Declan James     Women's: 1. Sivasangari Subramaniam   2. Satomi Watanabe 3. Amina Orfi 3. Georgina Kennedy 5. Salma Hany   5. Nada Abbas   5. Jasmine Hutton   5. Fayrouz Aboelkheir     Results
    • 2026 UCI Track Cycling World Cup #3/3 - Nilai   Results (April 24-26, 2026)   Men's Sprint: 1. Harrie Lavreysen 2. Nicholas Paul 3. Mohd Azizulhasni Awang   3. Nikita Kiriltsev  (Russia) 5. Dominik Topinka   5. Mattia Predomo   5. Tijmen van Loon   5. Minato Nakaishi     Men's Team Sprint: 1. Italy  (Minuta - Napolitano - Predomo) 2. China  (Ruiting - Zhiheng - Zhiwei) 3. Netherlands  (Lavreysen - van den Berg - van Loon) 4. France  (Derache - Grengbo - Vigier) 5. Canada   6. Thailand   7. Kazakhstan   8. South Korea     Men's Team Pursuit: 1. China  (Ni - Zhengyu - Haijiao - Junjie) 2. France  (Besnier - Dupe - Petit - Tabellion) 3. Italy  (Boscaro - Favero - Grimod - Lamon) 4. Switzerland  (Bogli - Buhlmann - Poot - Sommer) 5. New Zealand   6. Germany   7. Japan   8. United States     Men's Keirin: 1. Mohd Azizulhasni Awang 2. Harrie Lavreysen 3. Nicholas Paul 4. Minato Nakaishi   5. Rayan Helal   6. Henric Hackmann   7. Tijmen van Loon   8. Martin Cechman     Men's Omnium: 1. Naoki Kojima 2. Grant Koontz   3. Yanne Dorenbos   4. Milan van den Haute   5. Keegan Hornblow   6. Alex Vogel   7. Max-David Briese   8. Hector Alvarez Martinez     Men's Madison: 1. Germany  (Augenstein - Kluge) 2. New Zealand  (Jackson - Sexton) 3. Netherlands  (Dorenbos - Hoppezak) 4. Italy  (Fiorin - Galli) 5. Belgium   6. France   7. Switzerland   8. United States     Non-Olympic Men's Events:   Men's Elimination Race: 1. Ilya Savekin  (Russia) 2. Alvaro Navas Marchal 3. Matteo Fiorin     -----------------------------------------------   Women's Sprint: 1. Emma Finucane 2. Hetty van de Wouw 3. Yuan Liying 3. Lauriane Genest 5. Stefany Lorena Cuadrado Florez   5. Iana Burlakova  (Russia) 5. Nurul Izzah Izzati Mohd Asri   5. Luz Daniela Gaxiola Gonzalez     Women's Team Sprint: 1. China  (Xuehuang - Liying - Yuxuan) 2. Netherlands  (Kalee - van de Wouw - van der Peet) 3. Mexico  (Gaxiola Gonzalez - Verdugo Osuna - Vizcaino Garcia) 4. Poland  (Karwacka - Seremak - Sibiak) 5. United States   6. Czech Republic   7. Malaysia   8. Ukraine     Women's Team Pursuit: 1. New Zealand  (Botha - Donnelly - Fowler - Shearman) 2. China  (Xianbing - Ning - Xiaoyue - Suwan) 3. Netherlands  (van Belle - Wiebes - Hengeveld - van der Duin) 4. Belgium  (de Clercq - Hesters - Vanhove - Vierstraete) 5. Germany   6. Switzerland   7. Japan   8. Poland     Women's Keirin: 1. Wang Lijuan 2. Luz Daniela Gaxiola Gonzalez 3. Emma Finucane 4. Stefany Lorena Cuadrado Florez 5. Hetty van de Wouw   6. Lauriane Genest   7. Iana Burlakova  (Russia) 8. Nikola Sibiak     Women's Omnium: 1. Anita Yvonne Stenberg 2. Lorena Wiebes 3. Samantha Donnelly 4. Yumi Kajihara 5. Lara Gillespie   6. Olivija Baleisyte   7. Yareli Acevedo Mendoza   8. Helene Hesters     Women's Madison: 1. Netherlands  (van Belle - Wiebes) 2. New Zealand  (Botha - Fowler) 3. Switzerland  (Seitz - Andres) 4. China  (Zhou - Chen) 5. Belgium   6. Japan   7. France   8. Hong Kong     Non-Olympic Women's Events:   Women's Elimination Race: 1. Anita Yvonne Stenberg 2. Yareli Acevedo Mendoza 3. Lara Gillespie     Results
    • Aleksandra Golovkina-Dolinskė (who is number 3 in Lithuania) announced about shifting to represent   I'm sure we won't really going to see her achieving much in international competitions 
×
×
  • Create New...