The World Para Athletics Grand Prix series enters its seventh year in 2019 with nine events scheduled to take place around the world between February and August, ahead of the World Para Athletics Championships in November.
The season kicks off in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, from 24-27 February – in the same stadium that will host the World Championships just over eight months later.
The 2019 series is then set to move to Sao Paulo, Brazil and the city’s Paralympic Training Centre, which has hosted the Grand Prix since 2017.
The competition is provisionally scheduled for 25-27 April, although it is still to be officially confirmed.
Third up is the Beijing Grand Prix in China from 10-12 May, where many of China’s top stars from the 2018 Asian Para Games in Indonesia are expected to line up.
China topped the Para athletics medals table in Jakarta – as well as the last two World Championships and four Paralympic Games – and the Beijing Grand Prix could well provide a valuable opportunity to find out which Chinese Para athletes can be expected to excel come World Championship time.
After China, the series shifts continents once again, this time to Arizona, USA, and Nottwil, Switzerland.
The Arizona State University hosts the Grand Prix on 24 and 25 May. US wheelchair racer Daniel Romanchuk smashed the men’s 800m T54 world record there in 2018 and the 20-year-old will certainly be one to watch in 2019.
The same weekend, Para athletes go head-to-head in Nottwil for three days of track and field action from 24-26 May with less than six months to go to Dubai 2019.
In the last two years alone, 14 world records have been broken at the Nottwil Grand Prix, which continually attracts many of the best wheelchair racers in the world.
Grosseto, Italy is up next, making a return to the Grand Prix calendar for the first time since 2016 – the same year the Carlo Zecchini Olympic stadium hosted the European Championships.
The event takes place at the newly renovated track from 8–9 June.
The 2019 series then goes to Africa for the seventh Grand Prix of the year in Tunis, Tunisia from 28-30 June before returning to European shores for the final two Grand Prix of the season in August.
The Friedrich Ludwig Jahn Sportpark in Berlin, Germany – the scene of the 2018 European Championships – hosts the penultimate Grand Prix of the season on 10–11 August.
Para athletes will be given one final chance to test themselves against major rivals ahead of the World Championships at the final stop on the calendar – Paris, France, from 29–30 August.
The Stade Charléty first hosted the Grand Prix series in 2017, and quickly became a popular destination for many of the world’s best including Brazilian sprint star Petrucio Ferreira, who smashed the 100m T47 world record there in 2018.
--ends--
Notes to the Editor
The International Paralympic Committee (IPC) is the global governing body of the Paralympic Movement.
The IPC supervises the organisation of the Summer and Winter Paralympic Games, and serves as the International Federation for ten sports, for which it oversees and co-ordinates the World Championships and other competitions, including athletics.
The IPC is committed to enabling Paralympic athletes to achieve sporting excellence and to developing sport opportunities for all persons with a disability from the beginner to elite level. In addition, the IPC aims to promote the Paralympic values, which include courage, determination, inspiration and equality.
For further information, please contact Rafael Maranhao, IPC Public Relations Senior Manager on e-mail: rafael.maranhao@paralympic.org. Alternatively, please visit www.worldparaathletics.org or www.ParalympicSport.TV.
You can also follow World Para Athletics on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram: www.twitter.com/ParaAthletics, www.facebook.com/ParaAthletics or www.youtube.com/paralympics.
25 Years at #1: Your best source of news about the Olympics is www.aroundtherings.com, for subscribers only
Últimas Noticias
Brigitte Henriques: “The important thing is that the women who are elected should be chosen for their ability, not because we are looking for modernization in terms of gender”
“When I was a girl I couldn’t find a club to play soccer in because most of them didn’t work with women,” Henriques tells Around the Rings during an in-depth interview in Crete, Greece.

The Hula Report: Winds of Change for ANOC in Crete
New leaders coming for peak Olympic group. Whether other candidates emerge in the months ahead, a contested election for the ANOC presidency will be a first for the organization.

Gilles Gilbert Gresenguet, presidential candidate for AFCNO: “We must take advantage of Paris 2024 to bring the Olympic Games back to French”
The elections take place November 18, and Abakar Djermah Aumi, president of the Chad Olympic Committee, is also aiming to win them.

USOPC announces 613-member 2020 U.S. Olympic Team

Roger Federer pulls out of Tokyo Olympics: "I am greatly disappointed"
(ATR) Federer cites "a setback with my knee" for the decision.
