Australia's most successful Paralympian announces retirement

During a glittering career Matthew Cowdrey won 13 Paralympic and 16 world titles. 10 Feb 2015
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Matthew Cowdrey of Australia competing in the Men's 200m Individual Medley - SM9 final during the London 2012 Paralympic Games.

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By Australian Paralympic Committee

“I have been fortunate to have achieved more than I could ever have dreamed of, and more than I set out to achieve, and more importantly I have enjoyed every minute of my time on the Australian swim team.”

Australian Paralympic Committee President Glenn Tasker has congratulated Matthew Cowdrey on his record-breaking swimming career, after the three-time Paralympian announced his retirement from the sport on Tuesday (10 February).

Cowdrey enters retirement as the most successful Australian Paralympian in history, having won a total of 23 Paralympic medals including 13 gold. He has also won more Paralympic medals than any other male swimmer in the history of the Games.

“It has been an absolute privilege to watch Matthew develop from the quiet 15-year-old kid who competed at his first Paralympics in 2004, into one of the greats of Australian Paralympic sport. He has become an outstanding ambassador for the Paralympic Movement, a leader of the Paralympic swim team and our most successful athlete ever,” Tasker said.

“Matthew’s commitment and determination could never be questioned, and his performances and success in the pool have been a contributing factor to the increase in profile for the Australian Paralympic Movement over the past 10 years.

“I have no doubt that Matthew will go on to a successful career after swimming. He has created a lasting legacy among his team-mates and the wider Australian Paralympic Movement and we wish him all the very best in his future endeavours.”

Cowdrey’s list of swimming accomplishments is staggering. In addition to his 23 Paralympic medals (13 gold, seven silver, three bronze), he won 21 medals at three World Championships (16 gold, three silver, two bronze) and smashed dozens of world records after breaking his first one at just 13 years of age.

Born without his lower left arm, the 26-year-old from Adelaide currently holds five world records, five Paralympic records and nine short-course world records. After winning 15 medals as a teenager at his first two Paralympic Games in Athens and Beijing, his crowning achievement came at the London 2012 Paralympic Games. Adding another five Paralympic gold medals, two silver and one bronze to his career haul, he became the most successful Australian Paralympian of all time. He eclipsed track sprinter Tim Sullivan’s previous career gold medal record of 10 and the record of 19 total medals held by fellow swimmer Kingsley Bugarin.

Out of the pool, he won an array of major awards including an Order of Australia Medal (2005), Australian Paralympian of the Year (2008), Young South Australian of the Year (2009) and Swimming Australia’s Swimmer of the Year with a disability on multiple occasions.

“I have been fortunate to have achieved more than I could ever have dreamed of, and more than I set out to achieve, and more importantly I have enjoyed every minute of my time on the Australian swim team,” Cowdrey said.

“What has made the decision so much easier has been the strength I see within Swimming Australia, and the current swimmers leadership teams across the able bodied and Paralympic squads. I leave Australian Swimming in a strong and promising position, and look forward to supporting from the sidelines through to 2016 and beyond.”

Matthew Cowdrey OAM – a career snapshot

3 Paralympic Games (Athens 2004, Beijing 2008, London 2012)

23 Paralympic medals

• 2004 – 3 gold, 2 silver, 2 bronze

• 2008 – 5 gold, 3 silver

• 2012 – 5 gold, 2 silver, 1 bronze

3 World Championships (Barcelona 2013, Eindhoven 2010, Durban 2006)

21 World Championships medals

• 2006 – 5 gold, 2 silver, 1 bronze

• 2010 – 6 gold, 1 silver

• 2013 – 5 gold, 1 bronze

14 current World Records

Long course

• S9 50m Freestyle – 5/9/12 (London, Great Britain)

• S9 50m Backstroke – 13/7/10 (Vancouver, Canada)

• SM9 200m Individual Medley – 11/9/08 (Beijing, China)

• SM9 400m Individual Medley – 24/1/07 (Adelaide, Australia)

• 34pt 4 x 100m Freestyle Relay – 15/8/2010 (Eindhoven, Netherlands)

Short course

• S9 50m Backstroke – 2/9/07 (Melbourne, Australia)

• S9 100m Backstroke – 4/12/09 (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)

• S9 50m Butterfly – 15/7/10 (Sydney, Australia)

• S9 200m Butterfly – 5/8/06 (Adelaide, Australia)

• SM9 100m Individual Medley – 3/12/09 (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)

• SM9 200m Individual Medley – 15/7/10 (Sydney, Australia)

• SM9 400m Individual Medley – 15/7/05 (Adelaide, Australia)

• 34pt 4 x 100m Freestyle Relay – 1/12/2009 (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)

• 34pt 4 x 100m Medley Relay – 5/12/2009 (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)

5 current Paralympic Records

• S9 50m Freestyle – 5/9/12 (London, Great Britain)

• S9 100m Freestyle – 8/9/08 (Beijing, China)

• S9 100m Backstroke – 31/0/08 (Beijing, China)

• SM9 200m Individual Medley – 11/9/08 (Beijing, China)

• 34pt 4 x 100m Freestyle Relay – 2/9/12 (London, Great Britain)

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