Great Britain at the 2014 Winter Paralympics

Great Britain at the
2014 Winter Paralympics
IPC code GBR
NPC British Paralympic Association
Website www.paralympics.org.uk
in Sochi
Competitors 12 in 2 sports
Flag bearer Millie Knight (Opening)
Jade Etherington (Closing)[1]
Medals
Ranked 10th
Gold
1
Silver
3
Bronze
2
Total
6
Winter Paralympics appearances

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland competed at the 2014 Winter Paralympics in Sochi, Russia, held between 7–16 of March 2014. The team was known by it shortened name of Great Britain, for identification purposes.

Great Britain fielded a total of 12 athletes; a team of five in wheelchair curling, and seven athletes in alpine skiing. The three visually impaired skiers competed with a sighted guide, taking the total number of competitors for Great Britain to fifteen.

The 2014 Winter Paralympic Games were the most successful ever for Great Britain, as they won their first gold medal. They also won their largest number of medals at a Winter Paralympics since 1984.

On 9 March 2014 Jade Etherington, with guide Caroline Powell, won silver in the women's visually impaired downhill. On 10 March 2014, they won bronze in the women's visually impaired Super-G. In the same event, Kelly Gallagher and her guide Charlotte Evans won the gold medal, the first for Great Britain at a Winter Paralympics.

On 12 March 2014 Jade Etherington and guide Caroline Powell won another silver in the Women's visually impaired slalom. They won a third silver medal in the Women's combined on 14 March 2014, making them the most successful GB Winter Paralympians. It also meant ParalympicsGB met the high end of the Alpine Skiing target of five medals.

On 15 March 2014 the wheelchair curling team won the bronze medal match, beating China 7-3. They had qualified for the playoff rounds in fourth place, losing to China 6-3 in the final match. They lost to Russia 13-4 in the semifinals. The result meant ParalympicsGB met their performance target for wheelchair curling.

Medallists

Medals by date
Day Date 1st, gold medalist(s) 2nd, silver medalist(s) 3rd, bronze medalist(s) Total
Day 1 8 March 0 1 0 1
Day 2 9 March 0 0 0 0
Day 3 10 March 1 0 1 2
Day 4 11 March 0 0 0 0
Day 5 12 March 0 1 0 1
Day 6 13 March 0 0 0 0
Day 7 14 March 0 1 0 1
Day 8 15 March 0 0 1 1
Day 9 16 March 0 0 0 0
Total 1 3 2 6
Medal Name Sport Event Classification Date
 GoldKelly Gallagher
Guide: Charlotte Evans
Alpine skiingWomen's super-GVisually impaired10 March
 SilverJade Etherington
Guide: Caroline Powell
Alpine skiingWomen's downhillVisually impaired8 March
 SilverJade Etherington
Guide: Caroline Powell
Alpine skiingWomen's slalomVisually impaired12 March
 SilverJade Etherington
Guide: Caroline Powell
Alpine skiingWomen's combinedVisually impaired14 March
 BronzeJade Etherington
Guide: Caroline Powell
Alpine skiingWomen's super-GVisually impaired10 March
 BronzeAileen Neilson (skip)
Gregor Ewan
Jim Gault
Angie Malone
Bob McPherson
Wheelchair curlingTeamWheelchair15 March
Medals by sport
Sport 1st, gold medalist(s) 2nd, silver medalist(s) 3rd, bronze medalist(s) Total
Alpine skiing 1 3 1 5
Wheelchair curling 0 0 1 1
Total 1 3 2 6

Medal and performance targets

On 16 January 2014, the funding body UK Sport announced their medal targets for ParalympicsGB at the 2014 Winter Paralympic Games in Sochi.[2] The target was set at two medals; although the funding body predicted that Great Britain had the potential to win as many as six medals, this total was not widely expected to be reached. On 15 March, the penultimate day of the Games, that 6 medal 'stretch target' was nonetheless achieved, following the success of the wheelchair curling team in its bronze medal match against China.

Key Red X Target missed Green tick Target met
SportMedal target setNon medal targetResultsPerformance relative to target range
Alpine skiing2–5 5 medals
1st, gold medalist(s)2nd, silver medalist(s)2nd, silver medalist(s)2nd, silver medalist(s)3rd, bronze medalist(s)
Green tick
Wheelchair curling0–1Top four3rd, bronze medalist(s)Green tick
Total2–6 6 medalsGreen tick
Total gold  1 

UK Sport funding

In the Winter Paralympic Cycle running from 2010 to 2014 the UK government body UK Sport allocated a budget of over three quarters of a million to fund ParalympicsGB for the individual athletes as well as the wheelchair curling team for the 2014 Winter Paralympics in Sochi.

SportFunding
Alping skiing£405,400
Wheelchair curling£350,200
Total£755,600

Alpine skiing

Britain’s alpine skiing team consisted of seven competitors. In the visually impaired categories Kelly Gallagher, Jade Etherington and Millie Knight represented Britain, racing with their respective guides, Charlotte Evans, Caroline Powell and Rachael Ferrier.[3]

Great Britain was represented in the sit-skiing category by Mick Brennan, Ben Sneesby and Anna Turney, while James Whitley was the sole British competitor in the standing events.[3]

Women

Athlete Classification Event Run 1 Run 2 Final/Total
Time Diff Rank Time Diff Rank Time Diff Rank
Jade Etherington
Guide: Caroline Powell
Visually impaired Downhill N/A 1:34.28 +2.73 2nd, silver medalist(s)
Super-G N/A 1:29.76 +1.04 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
Super Combined 1:01.80 +3.12 2 1:26.58 1 2:28.38 +0.63 2nd, silver medalist(s)
Slalom 1:00.87 1 1:01.02 +1.20 3 2:01.89 +0.65 2nd, silver medalist(s)
Giant Slalom DNS Did not advance
Kelly Gallagher
Guide: Charlotte Evans
Visually impaired Downhill N/A 1:37.36 +5.81 6
Super-G N/A 1:28.72 1st, gold medalist(s)
Super Combined DNF Did not advance
Slalom DNF Did not advance
Giant Slalom DNF Did not advance
Millie Knight
Guide: Rachael Ferrier
Visually impaired Slalom 1:09.87 +9.00 6 1:08.90 +9.08 6 2:18.77 +17.53 5
Giant Slalom 1:39.66 +11.04 5 1:27.68 +7.67 5 3:07.34 +18.71 5
Anna Turney Sitting Downhill N/A DNF
Super-G N/A 1:35.27 +6.16 4
Super Combined 1:19.85 +19.12 5 DNF
Slalom 1:13.94 +8.87 6 1:14.39 +9.53 6 2:28.33 +18.40 6
Giant Slalom 1:55.41 +24.97 11 1:25.35 +5.69 5 3:20.76 +29.50 8

Men

Athlete Classification Event Run 1 Run 2 Final/Total
Time Diff Rank Time Diff Rank Time Diff Rank
Mick Brennan Sitting Super-G N/A 1:30.48 +10.97 10
Super Combined 1:14.85 +16.14 9 1:25.89 +7.62 7 2:40.74 +22.54 8
Slalom DSQ Did not advance
Giant Slalom 1:23.79 +5.69 14 1:21.09 +6.99 14 2:44.88 +12.15 14
Ben Sneesby Sitting Slalom 1:01.62 +8.88 17 1:03.68 +4.25 11 2:05.30 +11.52 11
Giant Slalom 1:26.96 +8.86 21 DNF Did not advance
James Whitley Standing Slalom 54.84 +7.15 20 58.59 +7.31 15 1:53.43 +14.46 15
Giant Slalom 1:24.64 +9.92 20 1:18.14 +6.99 13 2:42.78 4+16.91 14

Wheelchair curling

In wheelchair curling, Great Britain's team was Aileen Neilson, Jim Gault, Gregor Ewan, Bob McPherson and Angie Malone.[3] Tom Killin was initially named in the squad, but had to be replaced by Jim Gault just before the start of the competition, as an illness meant doctors advised him not to travel.[4]

Round Robin

Standings

Final round robin standings[5]

Key
Teams to playoffs
Country
Skip W L PF PA
 Russia Andrei Smirnov 816038
 Canada Jim Armstrong 726642
 China Wang Haitao 545445
 Great Britain Aileen Neilson 545356
 United States Patrick McDonald 455642
 Slovakia Radoslav Ďuriš 454768
 Sweden Jalle Jungnell 455949
 Norway Rune Lorentsen 364562
 South Korea Kim Myung-jin 364174
 Finland Markku Karjalainen 276158

Results

Great Britain had a bye in draws 2, 5 and 10.

Playoffs

See also

References

  1. "Etherington named as ParalympicsGB Flag-bearer in Recognition of Medal Success".
  2. "UK Sport confirms medal targets for Sochi 2014".
  3. 1 2 3 "GB announce strong team for Sochi Paralympics". channel4.com. 23 January 2014. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  4. "Killin out of GB curling team for Sochi". Channel 4. 28 February 2014. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
  5. Round robin standings
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