Earle Connor | |
Nationality: | Canadian |
Birth Date: | 30 July 1976 |
Birth Place: | Castlegar, British Columbia |
Height: | 173cm (68inches) (2008) |
Weight: | 66kg (146lb) (2008) |
Country: | |
Sport: | Athletics |
Event: | 100 m, 200 m, 400 m, long jump |
Paralympics: | 2008 Summer Paralympics 100 m T42 – Gold2000 Summer Paralympics 100 m T42 – Gold |
Pb: | 60 m: 7.87 (2006, WR) 100 m: 12.08 (2008, WR)[1] 200 m: 26.40 (2006) 400 m: 1:07.32 (2006) |
Earle Connor (born July 30, 1976) is a Canadian Paralympic amputee sprinter. Connor holds several athletics world records in the class of T42, or above-knee, amputee.
Earle Connor was born July 30, 1976, in Castlegar, British Columbia to Dave and Diane Connor. Because he was born without a left fibula, his left leg was amputated above-the-knee when he was 3 months old.[2] At the age of 9 months Earle was fitted with his first prosthetic leg.
Growing up in rural Saskatchewan, Connor played all available sports, excelling at hockey, tennis and baseball, and graduated from Rosthern Junior College. Connor was the first amputee ever drafted into the Canadian Junior Hockey system as a goaltender.
Connor was inspired by watching television coverage of the 1996 Summer Paralympics to become an amputee sprinter with the goal of competing at the 2000 Summer Paralympics. At the 2000 Paralympics in Sydney, he took gold in the 100-metre final, but finished second in the 200 metres when a misstep on the first corner cost him a few seconds.
He returned to the Paralympics in 2008, winning gold in the men's T42 100 m sprint and setting a new Paralympic record time of 12.32 seconds.[3]
In 2004 he had tested positive for nandrolone and testosterone and received a two-year ban, which caused him to miss the 2004 Paralympic Games.[4] The resulting sanction was decreased from 4 years to 2 years due to the positive test being attributed to his physician prescribed medication.
In 2015 he tested positive for testosterone for a second time in his career despite the fact he had previously submitted his retirement papers, [5] resulting in a ban from competition for four years by the Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport.