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UPDATED: September-22-2008 No.39 SEP.25, 2008
Table Tennis Venus
Poland's Natalia Partyka is the only table tennis player to have competed in both the Beijing Olympics and Paralympics
By TANG YUANKAI

In addition to Natalie Du Toit, another female athlete has competed in both the Beijing Olympics and Paralympics. She is Natalia Partyka, a table tennis player who was born without her lower right arm.

Partyka ranks third in Poland and 147th in the world. Although she did not qualify for the singles event during the Beijing Olympics, Partyka represented Poland in the team events, and won two of the six matches she participated in. She was nicknamed the table tennis "Venus" by Chinese audiences.

Partyka began playing table tennis at 7, when she followed her elder sister to a table-tennis club and decided to give it a try. She fell in love with the sport immediately.

She could not throw the ball up with the right hand when needing to serve, so she learned to hold the ball between her upper right arm and her body and toss it from there. Partyka trained hard to balance herself and build strength.

She began to compete in sport games for disabled persons at 11 and won her first gold in the 2004 Athens Paralympics at 15. In 2005, Partyka first appeared at the World Championship and played against able-bodied athletes. In the team event at the World Championship this February, she defeated Li Jiawei, a Singaporean player then ranked 6th in the world. In the Beijing Paralympics, Partyka beat several Chinese players, and successfully defended her Paralympic title.

For a long time, Partyka has wanted to be treated as a regular athlete. And now she is happy that people are judging her on her merits and forgetting that she is disabled.

Partyka attributes her success to support from her family. Although she was born into a wealthy family, she was taught to be tough. Her parents did not treat her any differently from other kids. She often went to training together with her father and sister and has been regularly supported by her parents.

Partyka is currently a high school student. She wishes to study psychology in the future. She will try to qualify for the women's singles event in the London Olympics. "Maybe you will still see me at the Olympics even eight years from now," Partyka said.

 


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