Italian sprinter Valentina Petrillo makes Paralympic history

Italian sprinter Valentina Petrillo makes Paralympic history

The Games' first openly transgender athlete finished second in her heat of the T12 400m.

Paris Paralympics Trans Runner
Valentina Petrillo suffers from Stargardt disease and came out as a woman in 2017. (AP pic)
PARIS:
The first openly transgender athlete in Paralympics history, Italian sprinter Valentina Petrillo, competed in the Paris Games today.

Petrillo, 50, finished second in her heat of the T12 400m, a category for visually impaired athletes, in a time of 58.35s and qualified for the semifinals later today.

Petrillo suffers from Stargardt disease, a genetic retinal condition which leads to progressive loss of vision.

Unlike her opponents in the race, she competed without a guide runner.

In an interview with AFP ahead of the Games, Petrillo said competing in Paris would be “the most important moment of my sporting career” after she just missed out on the Tokyo Paralympics three years ago.

She came out as a woman in 2017.

“When I was a man I wasn’t myself, I ran with the handbrake on and I wasn’t happy. Certainly not as happy as I am now, even if I’m a little bit older,” she told AFP.

After first representing Italy in blind football, Petrillo reconnected with her first passion, the 200m, which she fell in love with after being inspired by former Olympic champion and world record holder Pietro Mennea.

She is also expected to run in that event during the Paralympics.

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