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Peter Worsley
Australian athlete

Peter Worsley

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Australian athlete
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Age
56 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Peter Michael Worsley (born 9 January 1968) is an Australian sculptor and Paralympic shooter. He became a quadriplegic following a Rugby Union match during his first year at university. He competed at three successive Paralympic Games from 1996 as well as the 1994 FESPIC games and many other International shooting championships.

Personal

Worsley was born on 9 January 1968 in the New South Wales country town of Jerilderie. He developed his skill in shooting at the family farm in Inverell. He attended Inverell Public School and completed his high school education at Farrer Memorial Agricultural High School in Tamworth. While a student attendingWagga Wagga Agricultural College (which later became Charles Sturt University), he was injured in a scrum, suffered a broken neck, playing Hooker for the Wagga Wagga Agricultural College Rugby Union team. Following his injury, he spent eleven months in Prince Henry Hospital in Sydney. During his rehabilitation at the hospital he met Paralympic rifle shooter Allan Chadwick who inspired Worsley to take up the sport of target shooting.

A classification system regulated and monitored by the International Paralympic Committee ensures that competition is fair and equal in Paralympic Sport. Worsley's classification SH2 rifle events, requires the athlete to use a sporting stand to support the rifle and does not exclude lower limb impairment. He competed in three events prone, standing and 3x40 (40 shots in each position kneeling, standing and prone) the difference being that both the athlete's elbows may be rested on a support in prone, one elbow for kneeling but no elbows in standing.

Worsley completed his Honors Degree, Bachelor of Applied Science Agriculture at Charles Sturt University in 1991. He moved to the central west town of Orange in February 1992, to gain work experience with the Department of Agriculture. In August of that year he moved to Tamworth, accepted a position in the field of Bio Security with the Department of Agriculture, and has been employed in this field since 1992. One year later while studying at University in Wagga Wagga he met Michelle. Both he and his wife Michelle, who now have two children, were employed by New South Wales Department of Agriculture, Orange.

At the 2006 SAIL-WORLD, Keen sailing-New South Wales Access Class Championships, hosted by Sailability Kogarah Bay, Worsley received The Encouragement Award, one of the nine awards presented. Twenty one sailors with a disability competed.

In 2011, Rocky Mileto, a quadriplegic injured in a Rugby accident in 1996, founded the Hearts in Union Rugby Foundation. He presented Worsley with a new wheelchair during half time at the Harper Bernays Rugby Challenge match, Millamolong New South Wales. $50000 was raised on behalf of the hearts in Union charity.

During fundraising at the annual Ag Races at the Murrumbidgee Turf Club New South Wales, in 2016, students from Charles Sturt University, previously known as Riverina College of Advanced Education, donated $20000 of the total raised to Worsley, a former student. Worsley, who is a high level quadriplegic, said that mobility was everything and the funds donated would provide the finance towards the purchase and to outfit a vehicle.

Worsley's first entry into competition in the world of art was rewarded in 2017. Blayney Shire Council acquired Worsley's work Stumped. The work had to be created by a local artist, relevant to the community and accessible to the public. The art is now on display in the Council Chambers.

Worsley, who has been creating metal sculptures since about 2002, held his inaugural exhibition 'unfurl' in metal sculpture, with fellow artist Colleen Southwell, at The Corner Store Gallery, Orange New South Wales on 10 April 2018. From 14–22 May 2019 Worsley's second exhibition 'essentiae', an exhibition in paper and steel, was held in Katoomba New South Wales, with fellow artist Colleen Southwell. Funds from Accessible Arts Grants Program provided the finance to install a Gantry Crane in his shed to assist in furthering his artistic ability for constructing sculptures from scrap metal. Worsley's recognition of the crane was appreciated in 2016. The crane had opened up a world of sculptures with no real limits to what he can do.

Sport shooting

Worsley's first shooting competition was the 1994 National Disabled Championships in Melbourne, where he broke 3 Australian records. He then competed at that year's FESPIC Games in Beijing, where he won a gold medal in the Men's air rifle prone 60 shots event and a silver medal in the Men's air rifle 3×40 shots events. At the 1995 European Championships in Finland, he came in 4th in the Men's air rifle prone event breaking his own Australian record with a 598/600. At the 1996 Atlanta Paralympics, he came in 22nd and 23rd in the Mixed air rifle SH2 events in standing and prone positions, respectively, and 17th in the Mixed air rifle 3×40 SH2 event. At the 1998 World Shooting Championships for the Disabled in Spain, he came in 20th and 23rd in the standing and prone events, respectively. At the 1999 Oceania Championships in Sydney, Worsley finished in 7th and 4th position in Mixed standing and prone events, respectively. With final scores of 596 and 585 in prone and standing, respectively, Worsley qualified for selection at the 2000 Summer Paralympics in Sydney. At the World Championships in Korea in 2002, Worsley finished in 15th position in Air rifle prone SH2 event. At the 2003 Swiss Open Championships, Worsley broke his prone Australian record, shot a Personal Best of 600/600 and finished in 2nd position in the final. He was one of the top 80 athletes who received an invitation to compete at the Fiocchi Final in Italy that year. At the time of these championships, he held three Australian records in standing, prone, and 3×40 shots events, was ranked fourth in the world in his classification, and broke a new Australian record for standing over 10 metres. At the 2000 Sydney Paralympics, he finished in 6th position in the standing and prone events, while he finished in 21st position in standing and 23rd in prone at the 2004 Athens Paralympics.

Recognition

  • 2003 – Medal of the Order of Australia OAM – For service to rifle-shooting as a competitor, and to developmental geospatial information systems for natural disaster assessment and management.
  • 2000 – Australian Sports Medal – "Took up competitive shooting as a paraplegic (sic), after suffering serious spinal damage in rugby union."


The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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