GB

Statement about European Championships 2021

During the European Championships in Madrid, a staff member supporting the Great Britain Women’s squad has tested positive for Covid-19 and, adhering to protocols, will now undergo 10 days of isolation in Spain.

To support the mental wellbeing of the squad, British Wheelchair Basketball has given all players and staff members the opportunity to return home, should they have any concerns about Covid-19. The decision to withdraw has been taken up by a coach and two players, who have now departed the camp.

To provide additional reassurance, Great Britain have voluntarily taken the decision that players and staff of the Women’s team will remain in their rooms unless travelling to training, games or the regular antigen testing.

We continue to provide support to the team in Madrid, as our number one priority is the health and wellbeing of everyone involved.

BWB Announces GB Men and Women’s Squads ahead of the 2021 European Championships

Taking place just four months after the GB teams returned from the 2020 Tokyo Paralympic Games, the Championships will take place in Madrid between the 4th to the 12th December 2021.

The men’s team, captained by Lee Manning, will see Gaz Choudhry again adopt a player/coach role working with the on-court GB Coaching team of Haj Bhania OBE (Head Coach) and Simon Fisher (Assistant Coach). The squad line up also see’s World Championship Gold Medallist’s Martin Edwards, Simon Brown, Kyle Marsh and Phil Pratt return to GB duty.

The women’s team will see 2019 U25 World Championship Bronze Medallists Jade Atkin and Niamh Horan make their senior squad debut. Head Coach of the GB Women’s Coaching team at the Championships will be three-time Paralympian and established GB programme coach Steve Caine. Assisting Steve in Madrid will be Loughborough Lightning Wheelchair Basketball’s new Head Coach and GB World Champion George Bates, as GB Women’s Assistant Coach.

The GB Men will commence their European Championships Campaign on the 4th December when they face Israel as their opening game in Group B. Twelve men’s teams will be competing in the 2021 European Championships in two pools (A & B). GB Men’s wheelchair basketball team have a rich history at the European Championships taking the title three times in a row, and the regaining the title in Poland at the 2019 competition.

The GB Women begin their European Championships campaign on 5th December when they face France. Europe is undoubtedly one of the strongest wheelchair basketball zones in the world, including the Netherlands who GB have faced in the finals at both the 2018 World and 2019 European Championships.

Following today’s Squad Announcement British Wheelchair Basketball Performance Director, Jayne Ellis commented:

“Undoubtedly this has been a unique and challenging 12 months in our international competition calendar – never before have we had to prepare the GB senior teams for two major internationals within six months of one another.

“In Tokyo our GB teams showed the world their grit and determination. Today, I am once again so tremendously proud of this group of incredible, focused and passionate athletes who will represent our nation in Madrid. I continue to be in awe of their dedication and talent, and their sheer determination to deliver world-class performances at the European Championships in December.”

Schedule available at: https://britishwheelchairbasketball.co.uk/major-competition-hub/

GB Women’s Team

#4 Charlotte Moore (1.0)

#5 Sophie Carrigill (1.0)

#6 Kayla Bell (1.0)

#7 Helen Freeman (4)

#8 Laurie Williams (2.5)

#9 Jude Hamer (4)

#12 Lucy Robinson (4.5)

#14 Joy Haizelden (2.5)

#15 Robyn Love (3.5)

#16 Jade Atkin (4.5)

#17 Niamh Horan (3)

GB Men’s Team

#4 Gaz Choudhry (4.0)

#5 Simon Brown (2.0)

#6 Kyle Marsh (2.0)

#7 Terry Bywater (4.5)

#9 Harry Brown (2.5)

#10 Abdi Jama (1.0)

#11 Phil Pratt (3.0)

#12 Gregg Warburton (2.0)

#14 Lee Manning © (4.5)

#15 Ben Fox (3.5)

#16 Jim Palmer (1.0)

#17 Martin Edwards (4.0)

Choudhry shortlisted for 2021’s greatest coaching moment

GB player and three-time Paralympian, Gaz Choudhry, has been shortlisted for 2021’s greatest coaching moment, after taking on the role as player-coach at this summer’s Paralympic Games. The move came after the GB Head Coach Haj Bhania tested positive to Covid-19 prior to the Games and was unable to travel.

Under Gaz’s leadership the GB Men’s team delivered a stunning on court performance in Tokyo, showcasing drama and outstanding wheelchair basketball. He powered the team to consistently deliver win after win, laying down nail-biting second halves against the USA, Canada and Australia which had fans of the sport mesmerised.

British Wheelchair Basketball CEO Lisa Pearce is delighted with Gaz’s well-deserved selection for the Great Coaching Moment of the Year Shortlist:

“The GB men’s team demonstrated the grit and fierce determination that has seen this squad show to the world how powerful great on-court leadership is, and what can be achieved by a united and driven team.

“In the year where anything that can happen, will happen – Gaz without hesitation took a great responsibility on his shoulders to represent his nation and lead his team at a unique and historic Paralympic Games. Undoubtedly this resulted in one of the greatest coaching moments of the year and is a true inspiration to us all.”

The Great Coaching Moment Award is open to public vote and the winner will be announced at next month’s UK Coaching Awards. The award focuses not only on the material successes of coaches but on how they ground their work in putting people first.

On being selected for the shortlist, Choudhry said:

“It’s an absolute honour and privilege to be nominated for such a prestigious award. It’s incredible to be included in the great achievements of the other coaches, especially after the fantastic year of sport that we’ve had.

“Sport has the power to change lives and coaches have a huge role to play in that. I’m humbled and really gracious for the nomination. It’s testament to the achievements of the whole team, not just those selected for the Paralympics, but the entire squad and the support staff too – so thank you.”

To vote for your greatest coaching moment, visit www.ukcoaching.org/gcm-2021. The public vote will close on Monday 6 December.

Gaz Choudhry reflects on Tokyo 2020 and being named on The National Lottery’s Paralympian of the Year shortlist

Gaz Choudhry has spent over a decade representing Great Britain on the international stage; competing at three Paralympics Games, winning four European golds medals, a historic World title and two Paralympic bronze medals. 

His latest medal triumph came just a few weeks ago in Tokyo and it was, arguably, his greatest honour yet; leading ParalympicsGB to a brilliant bronze medal in Tokyo after stepping-up to the role of men’s player-coach just days before Tokyo 2020 after GB’s Head of Coaching and Tactical Development, Haj Bhania OBE, was unable to travel due to COVID regulations.  

The way Choudhry led the bronze-medal winning team and delivered outstanding individual performances has seen the 36-year-old recognised on the shortlist for The National Lottery’s Paralympian of the Year – and you can vote for Gaz here

“What this team achieved in Tokyo is remarkable,” Choudhry said after returning from Tokyo. “It is a huge honour and privilege to be named on the shortlist with so many great athletes who have created moments in history, but this is as much about the team as it is myself because what we achieved was only possible because of the group and I’m really, really proud to represent the team.” 

The ParalympicsGB team captivated audiences back home with their resilience and determination to overcome considerable challenges during their preparation, including as they headed out to compete in Tokyo, and during the competition itself. 

It was an outstanding team effort by all involved and that for Choudhry is the biggest takeaway from the summer; the way the team has come together to finish on the podium once again at a Paralympics Games. 

“Anyone who has ever played a team sport will know the amount of stress the dynamics of a team can give, but when you have an experience like this with 11 other brothers and support staff, the biggest complement I can pay this team is what a privilege it is to play a team sport and being part of this team has made me realise just how lucky I am to be playing wheelchair basketball,” Choudhry added. 

But as much as Choudhry is keen to deflect praise of his leadership and standout contributions to the rest of the team, the ParalympicsGB men have individually conveyed admiration and respect for Choudhry’s leadership both on and off the court throughout the tournament and upon achieving their bronze medal. 

Being a player-coach is a rare occurrence in elite sport but, while Choudhry admits it took a couple of games to get used to, he and the rest of the team adapted seamlessly to the role change and what was asked of them on the biggest of sporting stages. 

“It took a couple of games to find that balance and, personally, I referred back to the idea of being completely engaged with each role I had,” Choudhry said. “When I was playing, for me in terms of mindset and having a long, long mediation practice helped with this as I had to be completely engaged as an athlete. But as soon as there was a break in play to completely engage with the coaching side, I made sure that I got the messages we needed across, and I suppose it was just luck that it seemed to work out. 

“But I know one of the narratives maybe was it was all being managed by one person, but it really wasn’t; it was a huge team effort from everyone including all of the support staff who were absolutely amazing and they really were invaluable, and I include the players in that. 

“Lee Manning, Ian Sagar, Terry Bywater, Abdi Jama, along with the guys playing a lot of minutes like Harry [Brown] and Gregg [Warburton] and some of the less experienced guys, they filled in the gaps that were needed and everyone played their own part on and off the court.” 

Alongside his additional coaching responsibilities, as an athlete on court, there was barely a quarter in which Choudhry didn’t show up to score his share of the points. The three-time Paralympian led the points scoring for ParalympicsGB with 132 points, the fourth highest across the tournament, and was GB’s top-scorer in all but one of their games in Tokyo. 

Alongside his impressive points tallies, Choudhry recorded the most assists of any GB player and the third most across all nations (61 assists), recording four double-doubles including a triple-double in the quarter-final against Canada. 

Throughout the tournament, ParalympicsGB, including Choudhry, had to dig deep, coming back to win, including their 66:52 quarter-final victory over Canada and against Australia in the pool stage when GB came from 20 points down to top Pool B. 

Their fightbacks – both thrilling and nail-biting to watch back home – had fans at home captivated, while on the court in Tokyo it was all about belief. 

“We just absolutely had a belief that we could comeback from any kind of deficit, maybe to our detriment at times, but sometimes it’s not always a case of making tactical adjustments, it’s just a case of showing your fight and we saw that in the Australia game. 

“We never lacked self-belief, and for us it was all about being courageous and just rolling the dice whenever we could. We knew this summer has not gone our way; we weren’t the favoured team there, but we knew that if we gave it our best and left everything out there then we could look at each other and be proud of each other.” 

After defeat to the host nation Japan in the semi-finals, Choudhry rallied his team once again, top-scoring in ParalympicsGB’s 68:58 victory over Spain in the bronze medal match as the team secured their fourth bronze medal from the last five Paralympic Games. 

“We were devastated after the Japan game, but it was important to not just discount that and move on straight away, it was important for us to feel the loss, go through the process, absolute grief, it’s been five years since the last Paralympic Games, so for me it was important for the team to absolutely feel what we were feeling. 

“I made a point after the bronze medal game that the bronze validated the team from the outside, but we felt we validated ourselves. All of us, individually, myself, the 11 other guys and all the staff had given everything they could, there was going to be no regrets, and I think we just played that way as well and it manifested on the floor, that was our underlying spirit of the team. 

“For me right now, bronze feels very much like unfinished business, if I’m honest, we know this team is capable of more and in three years’ time in Paris, hopefully, we will get a chance to go one game further and two medals higher on the podium.” 

From superb team performances to thrilling fightbacks and tense finales, including ParalympicsGB’s stunning one-point victory over Paralympic champions USA in the pool stage, Choudhry says the Tokyo competition was a brilliant advert for Wheelchair Basketball. 

“I think all the Tokyo Paralympic games were a fantastic advert for our sport; games going down to the wire, the Australia game, the USA game, the semi-final against Japan, the quarter-final against Canada. Even the final, USA versus Japan. There were so many close games, so many tight games and what an advert for our sport, which is absolutely a world class sport with so many layers of analysis. 

“You can marvel at it for its athleticism, you can marvel at it for the individual brilliance, you can marvel at it for the team dynamics, you can be absolutely blown away by the execution and tactics if you’re a fan of basketball. There’s so much in our sport that makes it so fun to watch and such an engaging sport to be part of and a fan of.” 

Voting for The National Lottery’s Paralympian of the Year closes at 5pm on Thursday 23 September 2021. Vote for Gaz online here: https://www.lotterygoodcauses.org.uk/projects/view/gaz-choudhry?context=vote   

Anyone inspired by Gaz’s story and is interested in getting involved in Wheelchair Basketball can find out more by visiting www.inspireageneration.com. 

Bronze for ParalympicsGB Men’s Wheelchair Basketball team as they claim a dramatic win against Spain.

On the final day of the 2020 Tokyo Paralympic Games, and one of the final medals for ParalympicsGB, the men’s wheelchair basketball team completed their epic competition with a brilliant on-court performance against Spain.

The squad has earnt well deserved respect and recognition for their outstanding performance and incredible teamwork during this Paralympic Games.  Overcoming considerable challenges during preparation and as they headed out to compete, they have proven to the world the value of digging deep and working together to achieve success.

Throughout the tournament and upon achieving their bronze medal the ParalympicsGB men’s team have only conveyed admiration and respect for player/coach Choudhry’s leadership both on and off the court during the Games.

Following the bronze win Gaz Choudhry underlined the team’s mutual respect for each other, commenting:

“The team has allowed me to be an athlete, player and coach at the same time. It’s been challenging and tough but without this group I couldn’t have done it.

“Bronze medal game is more about heart – it’s the toughest game to play as both teams have absolutely had their heart broken.

“We’ve had so many knock backs, we’ve had a season where we haven’t been together for two years (due to COVID) and we have just relied on our experience of being resilient and courageous, and being truthful.”

Jayne Ellis, ParalympicsGB Team Leader and British Wheelchair Basketball Performance Director elated by the win commented:

“I have so much respect for this incredible team of players – I am superbly proud of each and every one of them. They have never backed down, staring the challenges of this tournament directly in the eye.

“With Gaz Choudhry and Ian Sagar’s leadership in the coach and captain roles, these players have shared their extensive experience and depth of knowledge of the game to empower this team to continue fighting throughout.

“Their Paralympic bronze medals are hard fought and thoroughly deserved.”

Brilliant fightback saw ParalympicsGB Men’s Team advance through to the Tokyo 2020 Semi-Finals after a dramatic win against Canada.

After a 20-point comeback against Australia on Monday, the ParalympicsGB Men’s Wheelchair Basketball Team again showed incredible resilience to qualify for the semi-finals, coming from 10 points down in the third quarter to beat Canada by 14 points. 

For fans watching back home, it was another thrilling, but nail-biting final quarter, as the ParalympicsGB Men showcased their determination and fight to come from behind to reach their seventh successive Paralympic Games semi-final. 

Choudhry and the Team showcased incredible leadership on and off the court, supported by Head Coach Haj Bhania, who is advising the team remotely from the UK. 

The ParalympicsGB Men’s Team will now face Japan in the quarter finals on Friday 3 September at 12:45 (BST).   

Commenting on the team’s progression to the semi-finals, ParalympicsGB’s Harry Brown said: 

“The game went really well. We knew they would come out all guns blazing. Pat [Patrick Anderson] is one of the greatest in the World at what he does so having him out on the floor we knew he would try everything he could and throw everything at us. We battled through the storms and got the win at the end. The semi-final will be a tough one but we’ll do our prep and get the job done again.” 

British Wheelchair Basketball CEO Lisa Pearce added: 

“Watching this team on court in Tokyo is exhilarating and captivating. Their ability to reset, come together and absolutely fight to secure a win is truly spectacular.  These last two crucial games, against Australia and Canada, have underlined the sheer outstanding determination of this team to succeed. 

 “Given the challenges they have faced over the last 18 months in training and to prepare for this Games, their qualification into the semi-finals of a Paralympic Games should be applauded. 

“I have no doubt that this team will continue to keep fans enthralled with their grit and world-class games here in Tokyo into the semi-finals.” 

Heartbreak for ParalympicsGB Women’s Wheelchair Basketball Team as they lose to China in the quarter-finals

Emotional scenes unfolded in Tokyo’s Ariake Arena this evening as the GB Women missed out on a chance of accomplishing their dream and achieving a podium finish at the delayed 2020 Paralympic Games.

The Team, who are current World and European Silver medallists, had hoped to better their fourth-place finish in Rio and bring home a medal to add to their international credentials.

However, it was not to be as the team struggled to find their world-renowned form following a 20-month abstinence from international competition and challenging preparation conditions.

The team will look to regroup and reflect on the learnings from Tokyo, when they come back together and focus upon the 2021 European Championships later in the year in Madrid.

ParalympicsGB will now play Spain in the 7th/8th place play-off on Thursday 2nd September at 7:00am (BST).

Lisa Pearce, CEO of British Wheelchair Basketball commented on the team’s performance:

“To simply have made it to the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games is a huge achievement for this team.  The challenges involved in bringing together a team of twelve elite Paralympic athletes during the COVID-19 pandemic was significant, with contact team training not recommencing until earlier this year and no competition taking place since March 2020.

“At this moment I could not be prouder of what this team has achieved here in Tokyo. They have come onto court each game prepared to fight, and they have never once wavered in this determination. Each and every one on this team is an inspiration to me, they have proudly represented their nation and have made many sacrifices and braved many obstacles to be here.”

Breath-taking second half come-back for ParalympicsGB Men’s Team as they defeat Australia by one point to claim top of table and a place in the Tokyo 2020 Quarter-Final

In what was billed as the ‘Pool of Death’ the ParalympicsGB Men’s Wheelchair Basketball Team brought drama to the courts of Tokyo to secure four stunning wins against USA, Australia, Iran and Algeria.  Just one point secured the Team’s victories against defending Paralympic Gold Medallists USA, and 2014 World Champions Australia, in games which saw the ParalympicsGB men dig deep and hold strong on court.

The Team laid bare their determination and fight as they came back from a bitter defeat against Germany to face the USA with composure and world-class shooting to secure the win. However, it was final pool game of the tournament, GB v Australia, which demonstrated the outstanding credentials and composure of this team, coming back from a 20-point deficit to clinch the victory by a single point in the final seconds of the Game.

The Team’s top of group finish at the Pool stages of the 2020 Tokyo Paralympics is a testament to the influence of their Head Coach, Haj Bhania, who is supporting the team remotely from the UK, and his mentoring and preparation of player/coach Gaz Choudhry. It also characterises the resilience, perseverance and experience of the squad who have adapted and worked together to overcome significant challenges faced during their Paralympic campaign, and shines a light on the leadership that is flourishing within the team.

The ParalympicsGB Men’s Team will now face Canada in the quarter finals on Wednesday 1st September at 10:15pm (BST). 

Commenting on the Quarter Final Qualification, ParalympicsGB’s Lee Manning said:

“This is the position we wanted to be in. I’m extremely proud of the boys, I’m glad we got it done. We’ll stick together – it’s one more challenge, one more game”.

ParalympicsGB Team Leader, and British Wheelchair Basketball Performance Director Jayne Ellis added to Lee’s sentiment:

“This team have sacrificed so much in the lead up to this tournament and have spent significant time away from loved ones to be able to prepare and train.  They thoroughly deserve the wins they have delivered on court here in Tokyo.

“This is exactly what a world-class wheelchair basketball team should look like – they are once again showing the world how good they really are, working together to dig deep and deliver results.”