Carlee Beattie
File:180411 - Carlee Beattie - 3b - 2012 Team processing.jpg
2012 Australian Paralympic Team portrait of Beattie
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Personal information | |
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Nationality | Australia |
Born | 9 September 1982 |
Sport | |
Country | Australia |
Sport | Paralympic athletics |
Disability | Congenital arm amputee |
Disability class | T46, F46T47 |
Achievements and titles | |
Personal best(s) | Long jump: 6.01m WR |
Carlee Beattie (born 9 September 1982) is an Australian athletics competitor. A congenital arm amputee, she won the silver medal at the 2012 Summer Paralympics and a gold medal at the 2015 IPC Athletics World Championships in the Women's Long Jump.[1] As of February 2013[update] she is F46 world record holder in long jump.[2]
Personal
Beattie was born on 9 September 1982,[3] and is from Warwick, Queensland,[4][5] in the Brisbane area.[6] She attended Warwick West,St Mary's, Assumption College and Warwick High School.[7] As of 2012[update], she is studying to be a Nutritionist at the Endeavour College of Natural Health.[3][8]
Her left arm is not fully formed, a condition she was born with,[6][9] and is classified as an arm amputee.[10] She has played other sports including field hockey and netball.[7] She competed in the 2000 Netball State Titles, where she was named the competition's most valuable player.[3][7]
In 2012, she was named one of Zoo Weekly's sexiest Paralympians.[11]
Athletics
Beattie is an F46 classified long jumper,[3] 100 metre and 200 metre runner.[10] She had participated in the javelin event but an early injury deterred her from making it a regular part of her competition schedule.[7] As of 2011[update], she is coached by Brett Jones.[6] She took up athletics at the encouragement of a teacher[9] in 2007.[3] She has held a world record of 5.89 metres in her classification in the long jump, a record she set in April 2011. She broke her March 2011 world record set at the March 2011 Sydney Grand Prix.[3][6][10] In February 2013, she again broke her own long jump world record with a leap of 5.93 metres.[2] She bettered this mark at her next meet, the 2013 Sydney Track Classic at Sydney Olympic Park in early March, eclipsing the 6 metre mark to set a new world record of 6.01 metres. [12]
Beattie first represented Australia in 2008.[3] She represented Australia at the 2008 Summer Paralympics in the long jump, 100 metre and 200 metre event, making the finals in none of her events.[3][4][6][10] She competed in the 2010 Australian national titles, where she won the long jump event with a distance of 5.71 metres.[7] She competed in the Australian national titles in April 2011, competing in both her classification and the able bodied athlete event. In the able bodied event, she finished eighth.[3] She competed in the 2011 IPC World Athletics Championships in Christchurch, New Zealand finishing second in the long jump and third in the 100 metre event.[6][10] She was selected to represent Australia at the 2012 Summer Paralympics in athletics.[3][5][13][14][15] In November 2011, she was debating using a prosthetic arm while competing at the London Paralympics.[6] The limb would have cost A$5,000.[6] She won the silver medal in the Women's Long Jump - F46 at the 2012 Games.[1] She made the finals of the T46 100 meters, but was unable to run the final due to an adductor tear in her groin. [16]
At the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships in Lyon, France, she won a silver medal in the Women's Long Jump F46.[17]
Beattie won her first gold medal in a major international competition by winning the Women's Long Jump T47 at the 2015 IPC Athletics World Championships in Doha with a jump of 5.75m. Beattie commented on winning gold "I’ve always been the bridesmaid and to have this before Rio is such a massive confidence boost. It will give me the drive to keep going, to want it even more and to make sure that I can do the same thing again at the Paralympic Games.” [18]
She is coached in Brisbane, Queensland by Gary Bourne. [17]
References
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External links
- Carlee Beattie Athletics Australia Results
- Australian Paralympic Committee profile
- International Paralympic Committee profile
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- Pages with reference errors
- Use dmy dates from March 2015
- Use Australian English from March 2015
- All Wikipedia articles written in Australian English
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles containing potentially dated statements from February 2013
- Articles containing potentially dated statements from 2012
- Articles containing potentially dated statements from 2011
- Paralympic athletes of Australia
- Living people
- 1982 births
- Athletes (track and field) at the 2012 Summer Paralympics
- Paralympic silver medalists for Australia
- World record holders in Paralympic athletics
- Medalists at the 2012 Summer Paralympics