Sam Ruddock

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Sam Ruddock
Ruddock with Jim Edwards during the F35 Shot Put Final at the 2014 IPC Athletics European Championships.
Personal information
Full nameSamuel Ruddock
NicknameSam
NationalityBritish
Born (1990-02-19) 19 February 1990 (age 34)
Rugby, Warwickshire
EducationInternational Relations (Bachelor of Arts)
Alma materLoughborough University
Websitewww.samruddock.co.uk
Sport
Country United Kingdom
SportCycling
DisabilityCerebral palsy
Disability classC1
EventTrack time trial
ClubLoughborough Students CC
Achievements and titles
Paralympic finalsRio 2016 London 2012
World finals2015 IPC Athletics World Championships 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships
Regional finals2016 IPC Athletics European Championships 2014 IPC Athletics European Championships
Highest world rankingUCI World Rankings C1 – 4th (2020–2021)
Personal best1:16.671 (Kilometre TT)
Medal record
Men's athletics
Representing  United Kingdom
European Championships
Silver medal – second place 2016 Grosseto Shot put – F35
Track World Championships
Gold medal – first place 2022 Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines 1 km time trial C1
Gold medal – first place 2023 Glasgow 1 km time trial C1
Bronze medal – third place 2023 Glasgow Omnium C1

Samuel Ruddock (born 19 February 1990) is a Paralympic track cycling athlete who represented Great Britain in the F35 classification in the 100 metres and shot put events, for athletes with cerebral palsy. He is the British Record holder for the F35 Shot Put and the C1 Kilometere Time Trial, specialising in the track sprint events, preparing for his third Paralympic Games at Tokyo 2020.[1]

Early years[edit]

Ruddock was born in Rugby, Warwickshire, diagnosed with cerebral palsy, a neuro-muscular condition caused by his premature birth. He attended Bishop Wulstan School to study at GCSE level, taking a profound interest in languages, history and politics. He found it difficult to play the predominant playground sport of football, due to a severe lack of lower body coordination. He however found great pleasure in basketball and cites films like Space Jam and Coach Carter as major influences on his extra-curricular ambitions in physical education. After completing his GCSEs, he took scholarship exams in 2006 and was subsequently offered a full academic scholarship to attend Rugby School to study English, History and Economics, as a day pupil in Town House.

Loughborough University[edit]

After completing his A-Levels, Ruddock chose to study International Relations at Loughborough University. He became immersed in the ethos of Loughborough campus life and took up American football alongside his studies, playing linebacker for the Loughborough Aces, as the only player with a physical disability in the British University League. In late 2011, his final year of study, he was approached by an athletics coach during one of the football team's quarterly combine testing sessions. The coach, Joe McDonnell, spotted Ruddock's impairment and offered to coach him in disability sprinting, singling him out for his speed and power over short distances.

[2] Ruddock was quickly brought through the talent identification ranks by British Athletics and within months of training was awarded his senior international debut for the Great Britain Paralympic Athletics team that would compete in London, having attended his first official competition event in April 2012.[3]

Post-University, Athletics and Cycling[edit]

Having graduated with First Class Honours, Ruddock is currently training for the 2020 Summer Paralympics in Tokyo[4] and is employed as an Athlete Mentor for the Youth Sport Trust,[5] working with secondary schools to encourage pupils, to use the values and lessons learnt through sport, to better their academic performance.

During the earlier part of the 2013–2014 athletics season, Sam made the transition to the field events to further his medal prospects at the 2016 Summer Paralympics and was selected to represent Great Britain in the shot put for the 2014 IPC Athletics European Championships in Swansea. After producing a new lifetime best at the 2015 World Championships and a silver medal performance at the following 2016 Europeans, Sam was selected to compete at the Rio 2016 Games, finishing 6th in the final. He is currently in training for the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games in track cycling, having joined the British Cycling Foundation Programme in 2019.

He is a big fan of the National Football League and WWE.

References[edit]

External links[edit]