Former racing driver Alessandro Zanardi won Paralympic gold at a circuit where he once drove high powered cars, as the showpiece ‘Battle of the Blade Runners’ took shape on the track.
It was also a day for multiple medallists, as the most-decorated male Paralympian took gold again in his ninth Games and Australia got a new star in the pool.
The 45-year-old Zanardi’s win in the individual H4 (hand-cycle) time-trial at Brands Hatch was a triumph for the Italian former Formula One driver, who was critically injured and had both legs amputated after a horror smash in 2001.
He battled back into motorsport, even competing in a touring car race at the fabled southeast England circuit in a specially-adapted car with hand controls, before switching his efforts to hand-cycling.
And although he was travelling much slower than in his Formula One and Indy heyday — his average speed was 38.652 km (24.017 miles) per hour — he described it as “a great accomplishment, one of the greatest” of his life.
“With an engine pushing me, I didn’t realise it (the Brands Hatch circuit) was so hilly. It is very hard but if I had to design a course, this is what I would have done,” he added.
“It is beautiful, hard, it suits my characteristics of an old man.”
Zanardi’s performance was the highlight of a day that also saw Britain’s Sarah Storey win the women’s individual C5 time-trial over 16km to give her a third gold after double success on the track and the 10th in her Games career.
There were more medals for other multiple Paralympic medallists, including the most-decorated male Paralympian, Jonas Jacobsson, of Sweden, who shot his way to the 17th gold of his stellar career at the Royal Artillery Barracks.
The 47-year-old has won 30 medals of all colours since making his debut nine Games ago in Arnhem, the Netherlands, in 1980.