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Long, Tibbs Win 2007 ESPY Awards
// U.S. Paralympics
// July 16, 2007
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U.S. Paralympians Jessica Long and Casey Tibbs won the awards for Best Female Athlete with a Disability and Best Male Athlete with a Disability, respectively, at the 2007 ESPY Awards.
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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – U.S. Paralympians Jessica Long (swimming, Baltimore, Md.) and Casey Tibbs (track and field, San Diego, Calif.) won the awards for Best Female Athlete with a Disability and Best Male Athlete with a Disability, respectively, at the 2007 ESPY Awards July 11 in Hollywood, Calif.
"We are very proud of Casey and Jessica for everything they have accomplished athletically and what they have done for Paralympic sport in the United States,” said Charlie Huebner, Chief of U.S. Paralympics. “They are deserving of these awards and being recognized among the world's best athletes."
Long, 15, a bilateral below-the-knee amputee, had a spectacular 2006 season, highlighted by her performance at the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) Swimming World Championships in Durban, South Africa, in December, where she won nine gold medals and set five world records in the S8 classification: 100m freestyle (1:07.03), 400m freestyle (4:53.14), 100m butterfly (1:13.25), 200m Individual Medley (2:43.60) and the 34-point 4x100m freestyle relay. This year, Long became the first Paralympic athlete to win the AAU James E. Sullivan Award, presented to the USA’s best amateur athlete. Long has also been honored as the U.S. Olympic Committee's 2006 Paralympian of the Year and Swimming World Magazine's 2006 Disabled Swimmer of the Year.
Tibbs, the first active duty member of the military to compete in a Paralympic Games, had a banner year in 2006. At the 2006 IPC Athletics World Championships in Assen, The Netherlands, Tibbs clinched gold in the men’s T44 (lower leg amputee) pentathlon with 4,248 points. The pentathlon consists of five events: long jump, shot put, 100m, discus and the 400m. Tibbs also won silver in the men’s T44 long jump with a leap of 6.12m. In addition to his athletic agenda, Tibbs, 26, is a Petty Officer in the U.S. Navy, for which he has served since 1999. He currently works at the Naval Medical Center, mentoring amputees returning from the conflict in Iraq. He splits time between the Medical Center and the Chula Vista Olympic Training Center, where he is part of the U.S. Paralympics Track & Field Residence Program.
ESPY Award Winners - Best Athlete With a Disability
2007: Male: Casey Tibbs – Track & Field Female: Jessica Long - Swimming 2006: Male: Bobby Martin –Football Female: Sarah Reinerstsen –Triathlon 2005: Male: Marlon Shirley – Track and Field Female: Erin Popovich – Swimming 2004: Kyle Maynard – Wrestling 2003: Marlon Shirley – Track and Field 2002: Erik Weihenmayer – Mountain Climbing
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