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Róisín Ní Riain’s silver medal amongst a number of great Team Ireland performances this afternoon in Paris

30 August 2024; Women's 100m Backstroke S13 Final silver medalist Róisín Ní Riain of Ireland celebrates with her medal on day two of the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games at La Défense Arena in Paris, France. Photo by Harry Murphy/Sportsfile *** NO REPRODUCTION FEE ***

Róisín Ní Riain’s stunning Paralympic silver medal in the final of the Women’s S13 100m Backstroke was one of a number of great performances by Team Ireland this afternoon. 

Ní Riain stormed to second place in a time of 1:07.27 to win her maiden Paralympic medal.  

She said after the race, “I’m delighted with that swim and it makes it extra nice with my friends and family here to watch as well. My whole training group that I train with back at home (in Limerick), a lot of them are here so it’s really nice to do it with them here tonight. It’s great for my family to be here, to be able to see it. I have three sisters and they all swim so it’s definitely nice to do it with them around.” 

“That was a really nice feeling to hear (the huge roar when she emerged on the pool deck ahead of the final). To have everyone here to support me definitely spurs me on as well. I’ll have to go back and look (at the race) but I was happy with it overall. We’ll sit down and analyse it like every other race. Everyone says to me how much I love racing and I really genuinely do. It’s what I love to do.” 

“I was coming in tonight like ‘Oh God, I missed not swimming this morning.’ I definitely love racing and I think why I love it so much is that every single time you go out to race you can learn something new.” 

“It’s a great feeling to win Ireland’s first medal but there’s so much more to come. It’s definitely only the start for Ireland.” 

Shortly after Ní Riain’s medal win, Ellen Keane was two tenths of a second off the medals coming fourth in the 100m SB8 Breaststroke final with a time of 1:24.69. 

After the race she said, “Obviously I’m disappointed in not making the podium but I really tried. I can’t have any regrets. I really felt it in my legs towards the end of that race. I know it was just a margin off third but if I finished that race and still had energy and came fourth, I’d be so annoyed with myself.  I put it all out there in the end and I’m happy and proud of myself that I tried. It was so close in the end. I always knew it was going to be a fight.” 

“I was really in the zone tonight. I didn’t want to risk getting lost in the crowd or distracted. I just kept telling myself ‘I’m ready, I’m ready.’ I really did fight there. It’s not lack of trying that I came fourth and I’ve had so many highlights in my career.”  

“Since Tokyo I knew I was ready, mentally, to let go and ready to walk away and I think that’s reflected in my times through the years since Tokyo. For me it was just about giving it my all and I did.” 

“When it comes to being a champion I think you can define that in many different ways. It’s about being brave enough to show that you give it your all and that’s what I did.” 

“I’m so grateful that I’m here today and I’m really looking forward to the next phase of my life. I think I’ll still be involved in some way, shape or form, in Paralympic swimming and Paralympics in future.” 

In the Velodrome earlier this afternoon, Katie-George Dunlevy and Eve McCrystal earned a fifth place finish in the final of the Women’s B 1000m Time Trial with a time of 1:09.447. Dunlevy and McCrystal qualified for the Final earlier today with a time of 1.09:094. 

 

Speaking after the Final, Katie-George said, “We’re happy with the ride, it was a better ride than this morning even though it was slower, but that’s track racing for you.” she said with a giggle.  

 

“Fifth in a 1km is great, a lot of the other girls are specialists in this event and it’s not our event, and we don’t much track time. It just gives us confidence that we are doing well and our power is good for Sunday.” 

  

Talking about some the challenges she has overcome in preparation for these Games, Katie-George said: “Preparations were not ideal coming to a Paralympic Games. Three months ago, I broke my collarbone in a Road Race with Eve in Italy. I shattered it and had an operation, so I have been in recovery from that and trying to get myself fit on a bike and ready for the training camps, and ready to get in a time trial position with a lot of pins and plates in my arm and shoulder. I’m still working hard on my shoulder now and doing rehab for it and it still gives me pain, but that eases every day. I’m controlling what I can control, that’s just working on what I can do and trying to get myself ready.” 

 

She added, “I’m a very positive person, very optimistic, I never look back, just looking ahead that I’m going to be in Paris. I’m lucky that I didn’t do my hip and I didn’t break my leg and that I am here in Paris because a lot of people they get injured and miss out on a Games, I’m here and I’m racing and I’m healthy. Except that a few days ago I did have a virus and I was in bed for three days as well, so do you know what – things are set to try us and we battle on.” 

 

Eve McCrystal added, “I am definitely looking forward to Sunday, I think that kilo there was more like the first kilo of the Pursuit in terms of settling in, for me as a pilot finding the lines, and delivering lap after lap.  It gives us confidence going in. We’re up against it, it’s a huge fight against three British bikes, I don’t know how the French are going but all we can do is do our own ride, see what happens and what will be will be.  

 

Also competing in the Women’s B 1000m time trial qualifier and making her Paralympic debut was Josephine Healion, piloted by Linda Kelly. The pair finished in a time of 1:10.808 beating their PB by 3 seconds but narrowly missing out of qualification finishing in seventh with the top six bikes progressing to the final.  

 

When asked about making her Paralympic debut, Healion said: “It was absolutely phenomenal, to be a Paralympian and to compete at the Games and to get a PB here is absolutely amazing. Couldn’t have asked for more really.” 

  

“I’m new to this so I’m new to crowds as well but this is more than what you can picture in your head, you have to live it to feel it. It’s incredible and a big shout out to all the fans that came over to give Ireland a cheer on. It’s phenomenal.” 

  

Kelly added: “I am so happy with how today went, three seconds PB so just absolutely over the moon. To have our first competition out of the way, the nerves have settled a bit. The crowds have just driven us on as well, you could hear the Irish fans at the back straight. It was absolutely amazing.”
 

Day 2 Paralympic Games Evening Results (Friday 30th August): 

Name  Sport  Event  Result 
Katie George Dunlevy & Eve McCrystal (pilot)  Para Cycling (track)  Women’s B 1000m Time Trial  1.09:094 – Qualifies for final 
Josephine Healion & Linda Kelly (pilot)  Para Cycling (track)  Women’s B 1000m Time Trial  1:10.808 – 7th place 
Katie George & Eve McCrystal  Para Cycling (track)  Women’s B 1000m Time Final  1:09.447 – 5th place 
Róisín Ní Riain  Para Swimming   S13 100m Backstroke Final  1:07.27 – 2nd place 
Ellen Keane  Para Swimming  SB8 100m Breaststroke Final  1:24.69 – 4th place 

 

Day 3 Paralympics Games Schedule (Saturday 31st August) (times subject to change) 

09.00  Richael Timothy  Para Cycling (track)  C1-3 500m Time Trial Qualifier 
09.40  Shauna Bocquet  Para Athletics  T54 5000m Final 
09.50  Katie O’Brien & Tiarnán O’Donnell  Para Rowing  PR2 Mixed Double Sculls Repechage 
10.02  Ronan Grimes  Para Cycling (track)  C4-5 4000m Individual Pursuit Qualifier 
12.35  Richael Timothy  Para Cycling (track)  C1-3 500m Final* 
13.52 

 

14.01 

Ronan Grimes  Para Cycling (track)  C4-5 4000m Individual Pursuit Bronze Final*
C4-5 4000m Individual Pursuit Gold Final* 
18.13  Greta Streimikyte  Para Athletics  T13 1500m Final 

*pending qualifying results 

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