Ebbe Blichfeldt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ebbe Blichfeldt is a Danish wheelchair racer living in Switzerland who has competed internationally in the Paralympic Games and other parathletic events, in the T54 classification for athletes with spinal cord injuries who compete in wheelchairs. He also works as an occupational therapist.[1][2]

Blichfeldt was paralysed at age 13 as a side effect of cancer,[2][3] and began wheelchair racing in 2001.[1] His competitions have included competing for Denmark at the 2008 Summer Paralympics,[1][3] and for Denmark at the 2016 Summer Paralympics, where he qualified as the only Danish wheelchair racer,[2] and earned big cheers from the crowd despite finishing last in his heat in the 5000m race.[4] He placed third in the wheelchair category of the Dublin Marathon in 2018,[5] and second in the 2018 Rome Marathon.[6] He has held the Danish records for 1500m and 5000m wheelchair racing.[2]

Blichfeldt moved to Switzerland in 2009,[1] and trains at the Swiss Paraplegic Centre in Nottwil along with other parathletes including champion wheelchair racer Marcel Hug.[7] He is sponsored by OA Opbyg A/S, an axle construction firm in Karlslunde.[8]

Results[]

Blichfeldt's events and results include:[9]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d "Ebbe Blichfeldt", Athlete profile, International Paralympic Committee, retrieved 2020-12-17
  2. ^ a b c d Fauerholdt, Casper (5 September 2016), "Ebbe Blichfeldt", Sporten (in Danish), DR
  3. ^ a b Kjærsgaard, Karin (3 July 2008), "Ebbe Blichfeldt udtaget til paralympisk OL", Dagbladet Ringkøbing-Skjern (in Danish)
  4. ^ "Brazilians being Brazilians lift Paralympic spirit", USA Today, 14 September 2016
  5. ^ a b O'Riordan, Ian (28 October 2018), "Mick Clohisey runs Raheny proud in his first Dublin Marathon", Irish Times
  6. ^ a b "Gustavo Molina acaba tercero en el Maratón de Roma", La Tribuna de Ciudad Real (in Spanish), 8 April 2018
  7. ^ Keh, Andrew (1 November 2018), "A Swiss Powerhouse Races Into an Uncertain Future: Switzerland dominates wheelchair racing through prodigious financial support and a long tradition of mentorship; now its current champions are hoping to groom the next ones", The New York Times
  8. ^ Ebbe Blichfeldt, OA Opbyg A/S, retrieved 2020-12-17
  9. ^ See individual event links for sources
Retrieved from ""