Skip to content

Disabled Athletes Directory

Celebrating disabled athletes across sports, eras, and disability types—Paralympians, Deaflympians, professional athletes, and pioneers who changed what the world believes disabled people can achieve.


This directory highlights disabled athletes who have competed at high levels and/or significantly influenced disability sports. It’s always growing—suggest additions via How to Contribute.

Note: Not all athletes identify as disabled or with the disability community. We respect individual identity while documenting disability sports history.



Athletes with the most significant Paralympic achievements.

AthleteCountrySportMedalsYears Active
Trischa ZornUSASwimming55 (41 gold)1980-2000
Heinz FreiSwitzerlandCycling, Athletics35+1984-present
Jonas JacobssonSwedenShooting30 (17 gold)1980-2012
Ragnhild MyklebustNorwayNordic Skiing, Biathlon27 (22 gold)1988-2002
Roberto MarsonItalyAthletics, Swimming26 (16 gold)1964-1976
Beatrice HessFranceSwimming25 (20 gold)1984-2004
Chantal PetitclercCanadaWheelchair Racing21 (14 gold)1992-2008
Jessica LongUSASwimming29 (16 gold)2004-present
Daniel DiasBrazilSwimming27 (14 gold)2008-2021

Tatyana McFadden (USA)

  • Wheelchair racing
  • 20 Paralympic medals
  • Born in Russia with spina bifida, adopted at age 6
  • Dominant marathon racer

David Weir (UK)

  • Wheelchair racing
  • 6 Paralympic golds
  • “Weirwolf” – icon of London 2012 Paralympics

Esther Vergeer (Netherlands)

  • Wheelchair tennis
  • 7 Paralympic golds
  • 470 consecutive match winning streak (undefeated for 10 years)

Oscar Pistorius (South Africa)

  • Track sprinter with double below-knee amputation
  • First amputee to compete at Olympics (2012)
  • Note: Later convicted of murder; achievements in sport are documented separately from personal history

Ellie Simmonds (UK)

  • Swimming (dwarfism)
  • 5 Paralympic golds
  • Youngest member of 2008 British Paralympic team at age 13

AthleteCountryDisabilityAchievements
Trischa ZornUSABlind55 medals, most ever
Jessica LongUSADouble amputee29 medals, ongoing
Daniel DiasBrazilCongenital limb deficiency27 medals
Ellie SimmondsUKDwarfism5 golds
Sophie PascoeNew ZealandBelow-knee amputee15 medals
Brad SnyderUSABlind (Navy veteran)Multiple golds
AthleteCountryDisabilityAchievements
Tatyana McFaddenUSASpina bifida20 Paralympic medals
David WeirUKSpinal cord injury6 Paralympic golds
Chantal PetitclercCanadaParalyzed at 1314 Paralympic golds
Marcel HugSwitzerlandSpina bifidaMultiple Paralympic golds, marathon WR
Manuela SchärSwitzerlandSpinal cord injuryWorld records
Daniel RomanchukUSASpina bifidaRising star, world champion
AthleteCountryDisabilityAchievements
Patrick AndersonCanadaAbove-knee amputee3 Paralympic golds, widely considered GOAT
Matt ScottUSASpina bifidaMultiple Paralympic medals
Desiree MillerUSASpina bifidaLongtime Team USA
Ade AdepitanUKPolioParalympic bronze, TV presenter
AthleteCountryDisabilityAchievements
Esther VergeerNetherlandsParalyzed7 Paralympic golds, 470-match win streak
Shingo KuniedaJapanSpinal cord injury28 Grand Slam titles
Diede de GrootNetherlandsLower limb paralysisMultiple Slam winner
Dylan AlcottAustraliaParaplegiaMultiple Paralympic golds, media figure
AthleteCountryDisabilityAchievements
Mark ZupanUSAQuadriplegicFeatured in Murderball documentary
Chuck AokiUSALimb deficiencyTeam USA captain
AthleteCountrySportAchievements
Ragnhild MyklebustNorwayNordic/Biathlon22 Paralympic golds
Oksana MastersUSAMultipleMost decorated Winter Paralympian for USA
Henrietta FarkasovaSlovakiaAlpine (VI)Multiple golds with guide
Danelle UmsteadUSAAlpine (VI)Multiple medals with husband as guide
AthleteCountryDisabilityAchievements
Sarah StoreyUKArm deficiency17 Paralympic golds (swimming + cycling)
Heinz FreiSwitzerlandParaplegic35+ medals across sports
Alex ZanardiItalyDouble amputeeFormer F1, handcycling champion
Oksana MastersUSADouble amputeeMultiple sports

AthleteSportCountryAchievements
Jessica LongSwimmingUSA29 Paralympic medals
Oksana MastersMulti-sportUSA17+ Paralympic medals
Oscar PistoriusTrackSouth AfricaFirst amputee at Olympics
Sarah StoreyCycling/SwimmingUK17 Paralympic golds
Amy PurdySnowboardingUSAParalympic bronze, DWTS
Rudy Garcia-TolsonTriathlonUSAMultiple Paralympian
AthleteSportCountryAchievements
Tatyana McFaddenRacingUSA20 Paralympic medals
David WeirRacingUK6 Paralympic golds
Shingo KuniedaTennisJapan28 Grand Slam titles
Mark ZupanRugbyUSAMurderball documentary
Aaron FotheringhamWCMXUSAWheelchair motocross pioneer
AthleteSportCountryAchievements
Trischa ZornSwimmingUSA55 Paralympic medals (most ever)
Brad SnyderSwim/TriathlonUSAMultiple golds
Marla RunyanTrackUSAFirst legally blind Olympian
David BrownTrackUSAParalympic 100m champion
AthleteSportCountryAchievements
Ellie SimmondsSwimmingUK5 Paralympic golds
AthleteSportCountryAchievements
RJ MitteActor/AdvocateUSANot athlete but visibility
Bethany FirthSwimmingUK/IrelandMultiple Paralympic golds

Disabled athletes competing in mainstream professional sports.

AthletePositionDisabilityNotable
Shaquem GriffinLinebackerHand amputeeFirst one-handed NFL player drafted
Derrick ColemanFullbackDeafFirst legally deaf offensive player
AthletePositionDisabilityNotable
Jim AbbottPitcherBorn without right handThrew no-hitter for Yankees
Curtis PrideOutfielderDeaf11 MLB seasons
William Hoy (1862-1961)OutfielderDeafInfluenced hand signal development
AthletePositionDisabilityNotable
Lance AllredCenterDeafFirst legally deaf NBA player
Tamika CatchingsForwardHard of hearingWNBA legend, Olympic gold
AthleteDisabilityNotable
Casey MartinLeg disabilitySupreme Court case for golf cart use

Alex Zanardi – Former F1 driver, became handcycling Paralympic champion after losing legs in crash


Sir Ludwig Guttmann (1899-1980) – Founded Paralympic movement. German-Jewish neurologist who created Stoke Mandeville Games.

Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson – UK wheelchair racer, 16 Paralympic medals, politician, disability rights advocate.

Jean Driscoll – Wheelchair racer, 8-time Boston Marathon winner, first wheelchair athlete to receive ESPY.

Neroli Fairhall (1944-2006) – First paraplegic athlete to compete at Olympics (archery, 1984).

George Eyser (1870-1919) – Won 6 Olympic medals in gymnastics with wooden leg (1904).

Oksana Masters – Ukrainian-born American, most decorated Winter Paralympian for USA, multiple sports.

Natalie du Toit – South African swimmer, competed at both Paralympics and Olympics.

Becca Meyers – Withdrew from Tokyo 2020 over denial of personal care assistant, sparked conversation about athlete support.


Athletes to watch (as of 2025).

AthleteCountrySportNotable
Daniel RomanchukUSAWheelchair RacingYoungest Boston Marathon winner
Gia PergoliniUSASnowboardingRising Paralympic star
Various young athletesGlobalMultipleNext generation emerging

AthleteCountrySportAchievements
Terence ParkinSouth AfricaSwimmingOlympic silver AND Deaflympic champion
Jeff FloatUSASwimmingOlympic gold, Deaflympian
Marcus TitusUSASwimmingMultiple Deaflympic medals

See Deaf Sports for more on the Deaflympic movement.


Loretta Claiborne – Runner, 26 marathons, ESPY Arthur Ashe Award recipient

Frank Stephens – Self-advocate, Congressional testimony on Down syndrome value

Chris Nikic – First person with Down syndrome to complete Ironman

See Special Olympics for more on the movement.


Disabled athletes pushing limits in adventure sports.

AthleteSportDisabilityAchievement
Erik WeihenmayerClimbingBlindFirst blind person to summit Everest
Aaron FotheringhamWCMXSpina bifidaWheelchair motocross pioneer
Amy PurdySnowboardingDouble amputeeParalympic bronze
Bethany HamiltonSurfingArm amputeeReturned to pro surfing after shark attack
Kyle MaynardClimbingCongenital amputeeSummited Kilimanjaro without prosthetics

Many Paralympic and disabled athletes are active on:

  • Instagram
  • Twitter/X
  • TikTok
  • YouTube

Paralympic Games: NBC (USA), Channel 4 (UK), various broadcasters worldwide

World Championships: World Para Athletics, World Para Swimming, etc.

Daily coverage: Paralympic.org, Team USA social media, national Paralympic committees


To suggest additions:

  1. Athlete must be disabled or competing in disability sports
  2. Include: Name, sport, country, disability (if public), achievements
  3. Verify information with reliable sources

See How to Contribute



This directory celebrates disabled athletes and their achievements.


Have lived experience or expertise that could strengthen this page? We especially welcome perspectives on models not well represented here, including those from the Global South and Indigenous communities.

Suggest an edit or addition →


This page centers disabled people’s expertise and is informed by disabled-led organizing globally. For questions or to suggest additions, see How to Contribute.