Llongyfarchiadau
Results
September 04
September 03
September 02
September 01
August 31
August 30
August 29
August 28
Qualified for Final A on Aug 29
Ian Seidenfeld 3 v 0 Paul Karabardak
Kim Hyeon Uk 3 v 0 Tom Matthews
August 27
August 26
August 25
Welsh Athletes competing at Tokyo 2020
Find out more about the Welsh athletes who will be representing ParalympicsGB in Japan this summer:
Dave Phillips
Sport
ArcheryDate of Birth
22 / 04 / 1966From
CwmbranDave awoke one morning with numbness in his right leg, and after six weeks in hospital he was diagnosed with a relapsing remitting strain of multiple sclerosis.
Having been forced to take early retirement aged 46 from his job at Tata Steel, his wife Angie persuaded him, in 2013, to take up archery again. In his late teens, Dave had been ranked fifth in Britain, but because of work and family commitments he hadn’t competed for 30 years.
Dave joined Llantarnam Archery Club and was set to make his International debut at the 2014 Para World Ranking Tournament when his archery equipment was stolen from his car.
It was Angie who came to the rescue again, alerting the police when she saw the kit on sale. The culprit was caught and the equipment returned – allowing Dave to travel to the tournament in Nove Mesto in the Czech Republic and win gold (as part of the men’s team) and bronze (as part of the mixed team).
He also represented GB at the European Para Championships in Notwill, Switzerland, where he won team gold and mixed team bronze, as well as finishing fifth in the individual competition.
With psychologist and physiotherapist support, together with an athlete-led training programme and a bespoke shooting stool all from Disability Sport Wales, Dave climbed up the rankings and became Welsh number one in 2016.
He made his Paralympic Games debut in Rio in 2016, competing in the mixed team event alongside Tania Nadarajah. The pair were knocked out at the quarter-final stage of the recurve mixed team competition in a tense shoot-off by top seeds Iran 5-4.
“I can’t control other people, so I don’t know whether they are going to shoot good or bad at the time. I can only think about what I do and my own processes. I think I have the ability and I don’t worry about things when I am on the competition field.”
“A lot of archers have adrenalin rushes, which can be positive of course, but for some reason I don’t panic.”
“I know what to do. It doesn’t always go as I planned, but I know what to do so I just get on with that. I can only do my best.”
Career Highlights
2016 – Quarter Finals, Paralympic Games in Rio (mixed team recurve)
2014 – Gold, Para World Ranking Tournament, Czech Republic (men’s team recurve)
2014 – Bronze, Para World Ranking Tournament, Czech Republic (mixed team recurve)
2014 – Gold, European Para Championships, Switzerland (men’s team recurve)
2014 – Bronze, European Para Championships, Switzerland (mixed team recurve)
Get Involved

#Inspire
Have you ever thought about what your potential could be in competitive sport?
Are you 9 years old or older with a passion for sport and physical activity, and have either a physical, sensory or intellectual impairment?
If you can answer yes to these questions, then the Disability Sport Wales Performance Pathway team would like to hear from you.
Disability Sport Wales has prided itself on its success at major disability sporting events, winning more medals per capita than any other nation. We want this success to continue, but this can only happen by continuously finding the next generation of talented athletes and nurturing them into reaching their full potential. The Performance Pathway Hub is here is to provide an environment for individuals to learn, grow and develop, to help individuals to identify a sport to participate in and progress in competitive sport, and to give athletes the best possible chance of success at a World, Paralympic or Commonwealth Games. If you are interested in what the Performance Pathway Hub can offer you, please fill in the form below.
Not everyone with an impairment will have what it takes to become a world class athlete, but everyone should at least get the opportunity to try.
Disability Sport Wales wants to hear from every individual who is looking to find out what their potential could be within competitive sport, even if you have never done sport before or you’re looking at transferring to a new one.
Complete the #Inspire form
