Home » News » Laurent Chardard victim of a shark attack in 2016 competing for 3 competitions at the 2021 Paralympics

Laurent Chardard victim of a shark attack in 2016 competing for 3 competitions at the 2021 Paralympics

The sportsman licensed at the Guyenne HandiNages club in Villenave-d’Ornon near Bordeaux lost a leg and an arm during a shark attack five years ago. Since then, he has shone in the European and World Para-swimming Championships. This Monday morning, he qualified for the final in the 50m butterfly.

50 m butterfly this Monday, 100 m crawl Wednesday September 1 and 100 m backstroke Friday, a dream program at the Paralympic Olympics in Tokyo for Laurent Chardard.

The athlete celebrates his 25th birthday this August 30 and finishes 4th, at the foot of the podium of the 50m butterfly final with a time of 32 “29 to 1” 48 of the Chinese Olympic champion.

He had finished fifth in the heats a few hours earlier in 32”76.

The race went well, the clock is not so good. But it’s the series“he confides just after qualifying.

I’ll give it my all. Obviously, there is pressure for my first Games, but it made me want to hit the wall faster. In a hurry to be in the final, that’s where it will attack“.

Vice-world champion and European champion

The young mechanical and energy engineer graduated from the University of Bordeaux started the competition in 2017, just one year after his accident reported, at the time, by our colleagues from Réunion 1ere.

In 2019, he won the title of vice-world champion in the 50m butterfly and then became European champion in the 100m backstroke last spring.

Despite my accident, I never considered myself to be a “disabled” athlete. For me, the important thing is to give everything, no matter the number of legs or arms“he writes on his facebook page.

Laurent Chardard indeed accomplishes exploits with the right leg and the right arm less.

He is able to do a lot of training to achieve perfection“testifies his trainer Tugdual Gueguin, at the club Guyenne HandiNages of Villenave-d’Ornon in the agglomeration of Bordeaux.

In the water, no prosthesis to move forward. The young athlete trains 15 hours a week. Four are devoted to bodybuilding “to keep a very upright posture in the water“he explains in this report produced by our colleagues from All Sport.

In Tokyo he is officially not aiming for a medal but intends to beat his personal bests.

His journey is beautifully told in “An athlete’s life in manga: Laurent Chardard, the swimmer with a broad smile“which his friends on the national para-swimming team affectionately call” baby shark. “

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