BALLARD Angie < Back  
Sport Para Athletics
CGA Australia   
Gender Women
Born 06 Jun 1982 in Canberra, AUS
Height1.75 m
Human Interest
Further Personal Information
Higher education Commerce, Psychology - University of Sydney: Australia
Sport Specific Information
Why this sport? After her accident she was introduced to a wide range of wheelchair sports and discovered her passion for wheelchair racing.
General Interest
Awards and honours In 2013 she was named Athletics Australia's Para Athlete of the Year. (queanbeyanage.com.au, 30 Nov 2013)

In 1999 she was named Australian Capital Territory [ACT] Academy of Sport's Athlete of the Year in the impairment category. (susf.com.au, 2008)
Sport Specific Information
When and where did you begin this sport? She took up the sport at age 12, when the New South Wales [NSW] Wheelchair Sports Association sponsored a chair for her.
Further Personal Information
Languages English
General Interest
Hero / Idol Australian Para athletes Louise Sauvage and Fred Periac. (paralympic.org.au, 11 May 2012)
Impairment In 1989, at age seven, she was in a car accident that resulted in paraplegia. While recovering from her injuries, she was in rehabilitation with Christie Dawes, who would also go on to represent Australia in Para athletics. (dailytelegraph.com.au, 05 Sep 2016; bodyandsoul.com.au, 08 Oct 2011; paralympic.org.au, 16 Dec 2009)
International Debut
Year 1998
Competing for Australia
Sport Specific Information
Name of coach Fred Periac [personal]
Club / Team Sydney University Athletic Club: Australia
General Interest
Injuries She missed part of the 2022/23 southern hemisphere summer season due to an eye injury. (Athletics Australia Facebook page, 11 Jul 2023)
Further Personal Information
Occupation Athlete
General Interest
Other information TOKYO EXPERIENCE
The 2020 Paralympic Games in Tokyo was the first Paralympic Games since Sydney 2000 where she did not win a medal. However, she still saw the 2020 Games as a significant moment in her career. "For me Tokyo 2020 was a beacon on the horizon of my athletic career. I've been racing internationally since 1998 and whilst I watch so many of [my] former teammates move on into coaching or their other lives, I can't seem to give it up. The body, my body, is older and the mind a little more warped but I do love figuring out how to race fast and strong. In Sydney 2000 I was 18 years old and privileged to make my first team. I came fourth [in Tokyo]. Someone asked after if that was the worst result. Not a medal, but oh so close. But for me it was huge. I've done something like 22 international finals at the world championships or Paralympics [speaking in 2021]. I've medaled at Athens, Beijing, London and Rio but this last cycle [Tokyo] has stripped me down and shown me again how hard we sometimes have to struggle for our goals but also our health and wellbeing. We can't always share the steps or moments of how hard or amazing or boring or significant it is that we do, but these Games really brought home for me what my journey is, why I do what I do and why I want to help others find that too." (SportsDeskOnline, 17 Sep 2023; pdcnsw.org.au, 15 Oct 2021)

OTHER ACTIVITIES
She has served as a board member of Wheelchair Sports New South Wales in Australia. (susf.com.au, 29 Jul 2021)