Britain’s Grinham becomes first pregnant athlete to win Paralympics medal

Britain’s Grinham becomes first pregnant athlete to win Paralympics medal

The archer beat Phoebe Paterson Pine 142-141 to bag bronze in the women's individual compound.

Paris Paralympics Archery
Jodie Grinham will hope to win a second medal when she competes in the mixed team compound quarterfinals tomorrow. (AP pic)
PARIS:
British archer Jodie Grinham became the first pregnant Paralympics athlete to win a medal when she took bronze in women’s individual compound, official Paralympics social media accounts said yesterday.

Seven months pregnant, 31-year-old Grinham held her nerves to beat Tokyo Paralympics gold medallist and friend Phoebe Paterson Pine by a razor-thin 142-141 scoreline in Friday’s bronze medal match-up.

“Baby hasn’t stopped kicking,” Grinham said.

“It’s almost like baby’s going, what’s going on? It’s really loud, mummy what are you doing? But it’s been a lovely reminder of the support bubble I have in my belly.

“I’m really proud of myself, I’ve had difficulties and it’s not been easy. But as long as I’m healthy and baby’s healthy, I knew I could compete. I knew if I shot as well as I could, baby or not, I could come back as a medal.”

Grinham will hope to win a second medal when she competes in the mixed team compound quarterfinals tomorrow along with Nathan McQueen.

Stay current - Follow FMT on WhatsApp, Google news and Telegram

Subscribe to our newsletter and get news delivered to your mailbox.