Malaysia clinches three medals within 24 hours with Mohd Ridzuan Mohd Puzi and Ziyad Zolkefli striking gold in record-breaking fashion at the Rio Paralympics.
Ridzuan, 29, who has cerebral palsy, sprinted home to win the nation’s first gold medal in the T36 100m final before the 26-year-old Ziyad, who has an intellectual disability, struck gold in the F20 shot putt event – with a new world record to boot.
Ridzuan, who won gold at the IPC Athletics World Championships in Doha, Qatar last year, was quick off the blocks to win the blue riband event in a new Games record of 12.07. The previous record of 12.25 was set by Ukraine’s Roman Pavlyk at the 2008 Beijing Paralympics. The Ukrainian, a bronze medallist in London four years ago, was disqualified for a false start in the final. China’s Yang Yifei, the top-ranked sprinter in this category this year, settled for silver in 12.20 while Brazilian Rodrigo Parreira da Silva took bronze in 12.54.
“I’m so happy I’m bringing back the gold medal,” said Ridzuan, who later ran to the stands to hug his coach R. Jeganathan. Not to be outdone, London Olympics bronze medallist Ziyad then took to the field to break the shot putt world record mark twice on his way to clinching the second gold medal for Malaysia. Ziyad hurled the putt to a distance of 16.40m with his first effort, surpassing the previous world mark of 16.29m set by Australian Todd Hodgetts in 2007.
But he wasn’t done yet as he hurled it to a massive 16.84m on his fifth throw. Greece’s Dimitrios Senikidis (16.17m) took silver and Hodgetts (15.82m) the bronze. Abdul Latif Romly delivered the third gold for Malaysia by breaking the world record three times in the men’s T20 long jump final yesterday.
The Malaysian flag bearer, the youngest in the contingent at 19, faulted his first attempt but cleared 7.47m after that to break the previous world mark of 7.37m set by Jose Exposito of Spain in 2003. Not satisfied, Abdul Latif broke his own short-lived world mark with a 7.54m leap in his third attempt.
The lanky teenager then broke the world record a third time when he soared to 7.60m in his fifth jump – and that proved enough for him to bag the gold. Croatia’s Zoran Talic settled for the silver with 7.12m while Ukraine’s Dmytro Prudnikov took the bronze with 6.99m.