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    • Wheelchair Fencing
    LOCOG logoWheelchair Fencing
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      Wheelchair Fencing

      Wheelchair Fencing

      The sport of Wheelchair Fencing consists of three disciplines - Epee, Foil and Sabre.

      Did you know?

      Frames are designed so that fencers can compete against each other whether they are right- or left-handed (so left vs right, right vs right, or left vs left).

      In 2006, the World Fencing Championships for able-bodied and wheelchair athletes were held alongside each other for the first time.

      The distance between fencers at the start of a bout is decided by the fencer with the shorter arm. They can decide whether to fence at their own distance, that of their opponent or anywhere between the two.

      Key facts

      Venue: ExCeL
      Dates: Tuesday 4 September –Saturday 8 September
      Gold medals up for grabs: 12
      Athletes: 100

      Wheelchair Fencing: Then and now

      Wheelchair Fencing was introduced by Sir Ludwig Guttmann at the 1953 Stoke International Games.

      It was part of the programme for the first Paralympic Games in Rome 1960.

      The sport has long been popular in Europe, but it wasn’t until the turn of the 1970s and 1980s that its popularity spread to North America and Asia.

      How to play – and win

      Participants compete in wheelchairs clamped into a metal frame. This gives the fencer maximum upper body movement along with full confidence that the chair will not move or tip over.

      There are three disciplines - Epee, Foil and Sabre.

      Target areas for Foil and Sabre are the same as those for able-bodied Fencing. The target at Epee is everything from the waist upwards with a lamé apron worn to cancel out blows below the waist.

      Bouts in the first round of competition are the best of nine hits. The top competitors are promoted to a direct elimination, where bouts are awarded to the first get to 15 hits.
       

      Wheelchair Fencing at the Games

      Wheelchair Fencing was part of the first Paralympic Games in Rome 1960.

      At the Paralympic Games in Seoul 1988, a new system of integrated classification for Wheelchair Fencing was introduced, which allows athletes with different disabilities (amputee, polio, cerebral palsy and paraplegia) the opportunity to compete together.

      Get involved

      For more information, visit the Great Britain Fencing Association, the British Disabled Fencing Association and the International Wheelchair Committee

      Learn more about how to get involved at Parasport

      See also Paralympic Sport TV and the International Paralympic Committee.


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      See also

      Fencing, Men's individual foil semi-final, Beijing 2008

      Fencing
      Find out more about Fencing at the Olympics.

      Paralympic Sport TV

      Watch Paralympic Sport TV

      View live and on-demand Paralympic action.

      Venue: ExCeL

      ExCeL

      The LOCOG venues team will be creating arenas in the 100 acre space to host the events.

      Tickets

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      Who

      Chiu Yee Yu

      Name: Chui Yee Yu
      Date of birth: 29 March 1984
      Country: Hong Kong

      Chui Yee Yu only took up the sport after she was approached by some wheelchair fencers while swimming. Since making her first major appearance at the 2002 World Championships – where she won gold – Yu has continued to lead the way in the Foil and Epee events. At Athens, she took gold in both events by comfortable winning margins. At Beijing in 2008 she added to her Olympic titles by winning gold in the Foil and silver in the Epee.

      Expand to read more

      Related photos

      Wheelchair Fencing, Women's Individual Foil, Athens 2004

      Wheelchair Fencing, Women's Individual Foil, Athens 2004

      • Other sites
      • Other sites

      • Great Britain Fencing Association
      • British Disabled Fencing Association
      • Paralympic Sport TV
      • International Paralympic Committee
      • International Wheelchair Fencing Committee
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