Every year, hundreds — even thousands — of people have the opportunity to attend one of Chantal Petitclerc’s talks. In English or in French, Chantal speaks about the stages of her life, the circumstances that brought her to become a wheelchair track and field athlete, her major victories, and her minor disappointments. Without preaching, she uses her own story to illustrate the importance of perseverance, ambitious goals, vision, and, especially, dreams.
After an impressive 5 gold medals in Athens 2004, she does it again!!
Back from the Beijing Paralympic Games with 5 gold medals, 2 new World records and 1 new Paralympic record, Chantal Petitclerc becomes the world’s most decorated track athlete, with a total of 21 Paralympic medals, including 14 gold medals. The only Canadian to medal at the Olympic, Paralympic and Commonwealth Games, Chantal is currently the World record holder for the 100m, 200m, 400m, 800m and 1500m.
One of Chantal Petitclerc’s big wins was history in the making. In July 2002 at the Commonwealth Games in Manchester, England, she won the gold medal in the 800m in a time of 1 minute 52.92 seconds. It was the first wheelchair event to be fully integrated into the program of a major international competition. In winning an “official” gold medal, Chantal became the first athlete in the history of sports for the disabled to register a result for her country’s team. She does it again in Melbourne two years later, where she has the great honour of being flag bearer for the opening ceremonies.
Chantal was born on December 15, 1969 in Saint-Marc-des-Carrières in Quebec. At the age of thirteen, she lost the use of both legs in an accident. Gaston Jacques, a high school physical education teacher, was to have a decisive influence on her life when he convinced her to try swimming to develop her physical strength and stamina. It was Chantal’s first contact with sports and training.
When she was eighteen, Pierre Pomerleau, a trainer at Université Laval in Quebec City, introduced her to wheelchair sports. Using a homemade wheelchair, she took part in her first race and came in dead last, well behind the other competitors. But never mind that, she had just fallen in love with wheelchair racing, and a long and fruitful career had begun!
While Chantal was developing her skills as a wheelchair athlete, she pursued her studies, first in social sciences at the CEGEP de Sainte-Foy and then in history at the University of Alberta, where she registered in order to be able to train with Peter Eriksson, who remains her coach to this day.
A member of the national team since 1988, Chantal competed in the Paralympic Games for the first time in Barcelona in 1992, returning with two bronze medals, the start of an impressive collection that now includes an Olympic medal, 21 Paralympic medals, 14 of them gold.
She is one of the twenty most influential women in sport according to the Canadian Association for the Advancement of Women and Sport and Physical Activity.
In December 2003, she received the Meritorious Service Medal, Civil Division, from Canada’s Governor General, the Honourable Adrienne Clarkson. The meritorious service awards honour Canadians and foreigners whose achievements have made all Canadians proud. These remarkable individuals — athletes, soldiers, researchers, community activists — have contributed to Canadian society, both at home and abroad, through their strong determination, talent and excellence.
Presentations Include:
Determination, Perseverance, Discipline: Enhancing your Natural Advantage
Together on the Podium: Recognizing that Personal Success is the Outcome of Team Effort.