Paralympians Demand Olympic Response to Russian Ban
With more sunshine seen than snow at the Winter Paralympics, calls for the Games to move in the calendar grow stronger.
Britain's Scott Meenagh competed in a T-shirt during his Para-biathlon and cross-country skiing events [Getty Images] Athletes in T-shirts, fans applying suncream - have these been the Summer or Winter Paralympics? If you were to listen to American Patrick Halgren, who called the conditions at the Milan-Cortina Games "tropical" and "like surfing", you would think the former. Until you were told he is a skier.
Since the 1992 Games, the Winter Paralympics have always been held in March, usually starting just shy of a fortnight after the conclusion of the Winter Olympics. That means conditions during the Games have often been more spring-like than winter, with temperatures peaking at 26C four years ago in Beijing. While such temperatures have not been felt in Cortina, it has been warm, and until a huge dump of snow fell overnight before Sunday's final day of competition, snow had only been seen on the groomed competition pistes.
A blazing sun on several days of competition, mixed with some rain, had caused snow on the courses to turn soft and slushy, which in turns sticks to athletes' skis and snowboards. Last weekend a third official training session for the Para-alpine skiing downhill events was cancelled in a bid to maintain the piste conditions. While many athletes have praised the efforts of organisers to keep the tracks in as good a condition as possible, conditions on Friday during the men's giant slalom events were far from ideal, with British visually impaired skier Fred Warburton describing it as a "bathtub of Slush Puppie".
His guide, James Hannan, said: "The snow surface was changing every single gate, so we never knew how the ski was going to react. "It was almost like survival of the fittest. " It certainly proved that way during the sitting event, which followed the visually impaired and standing races: 18 athletes from a field of 37 failed to make it to the bottom of the course.
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