Key Points
- The Paris 2024 Paralympic Games will run until 9 September.
- More than 4,400 athletes from around the world will compete in 549 medal events.
- 160 Australian athletes will compete across 17 events.
A record 168 delegations comprising around 4,400 athletes will compete at the Games, while there’ll be a record 1983 female athletes, more than double the 988 who competed at the Sydney 2000 Paralympic Games.
What happened during the opening ceremony?
French musicians Lucky Love and Christine and the Queens performed, five French Paralympians lit the dazzling yellow cauldron to culminate the torch relay, and International Paralympic Committee president Andrew Parsons told the athletes and spectators he hoped for an “inclusion revolution”.
What sports are played at the Paralympics?
Among them are Para-powerlifting, Boccia, and Goalball.
The Paralympics will included a total of 549 medal events, including 164 in Para-athletics and 141 in Para-swimming, which are the two biggest sports.
Australians to watch at this Olympics
Making her Paralympic debut in para-athletics, 16-year-old Warlpiri woman Telaya Blacksmith is set to become Australia’s 16th known Indigenous Paralympian. She currently holds several age records for the 100m, 200m and long jump. Blacksmith is one of four Indigenous athletes competing at the Paralympics for Australia.
Competing in her second Paralympic Games, Graham was the first woman to represent Australia in wheelchair rugby. The 37-year-old librarian will lead the Australian Steelers in Paris. The Steelers are one of the best wheelchair rugby teams in the world and secured consecutive gold medals in London and Rio before a semi-final defeat against the United States in Tokyo. She is hoping to lead her team to redemption in Paris.
The countries competing in Paris
Eritrea, Kiribati and Kosovo are expected to make their Paralympic debuts at these games.
How can I find out what’s on, and when?
When is the Paralympics closing ceremony?
It will start at 4.30am AEST for viewers in Victoria, NSW, Queensland, Tasmania, and the ACT, 4am ACST for those in the Northern Territory and South Australia, and 2.30am AWST for Western Australians.
How to watch the Paralympics
Each day, over 13 hours of live coverage will be available on free-to-air television across Channel 9 and 9Gem.