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Love Rio: the 2016 Olympic and Paralympic Tennis Events

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U nlike some other Paralympic sports, wheelchair tennis is not about setting records, even if the quad doubles bronze medal match did last a record four hours and 25 minutes. It's about raising the bar, figuratively speaking, and in that respect the sport succeeded wonderfully in Rio on its seventh official appearance at a Paralympic Games. Wheelchair tennis has come a long way since its first Paralympic appearance as a demonstration event at Seoul 1988. It became a full medal sport at Barcelona four years later. And to think that its founder, Brad Parks, was once advised by a leading figure in wheelchair sport that wheelchair tennis would never succeed. Try telling that to gold medallists Gordon Reid, Jiske Griffioen, Dylan Alcott and all the other Paralympians at Rio 2016 who kept large crowds enthralled throughout the eight days of competition at the Barra Olympic Tennis Centre. Images, left to right: Dylan Alcott now has Paralympic gold medals in both wheelchair tennis and wheelchair basketball Jiske Griffioen's gold continued Dutch domination in Paralympic women's singles Gordon Reid won the battle of the Brits in the men's final British supporters

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