Different Athletes, Different Needs blog #10
April 13, 2026
Jessica Bentley
Dr. Sowers
Different Athletes, Different Needs
The Paralympic Games are one of the world's most respected sporting events that celebrate the most elite
competitions among athletes who have physical and sensory impairments. There are strong reasons for keeping the
Paralympics and Special Olympics separate from each other. The separation is critical to help maintain restrictions
on athletes with intellectual disabilities in the Paralympic platform.
The Paralympics were designed around a very specific classification system that helps group athletes by the impact
of their impairment on specific high-performance sports. The goal of this is to ensure that competition is fair and a
winner is determined by skill and training, not by the difference of their impairment. Physical and visual
impairments and other disabilities, such as spinal cord injuries, limb loss, or visual impairment, are the ways that
athletes are measured. These are the ways you can fairly categorize across athletes. This scientific rigor is essential
in elite sport and is reflected in the detailed Paralympic classification codes used today. This is one reason why
the Paralympic and Special Olympics should continue to be separate athletic competitions.
Intellectual impairment presents a unique challenge for elite sports. Most of the time, an intellectual disability
doesn't present itself in a way that consistently affects competitive performance in the same way as a physical
impairment. The challenge is to develop a classification system that separates athletes based on a real competitive
disadvantage rather than a subjective judgment that could lead to unfair advantages. This was highlighted sadly
during the 2000 Sydney Paralympics. A scandal involving the Spanish basketball team caused a problem when they
fielded players without intellectual disabilities, which then led to stripping medals and a suspension of all ID classes
from the Paralympic program.
After this incident, the International Paralympic Committee has now limited intellectual disability classification to
only a few sports, like swimming. This has now excluded athletes from many other sports, especially in the Winter
Games. Even if there were to be stricter standards, the continuation of inclusion of athletes with intellectual
disabilities in such a competitive, high-stakes environment raises ongoing questions about fairness, integrity of
competitions, and consistency.
The Special Olympics exists because athletes with intellectual disabilities benefit from different types of sporting
events. The Special Olympics also helps to emphasize participation, personal achievement, and year‑round
competition that matches athletes with similar ability levels and not just disability labels. The Special Olympics
helps to prioritize things like inclusion and community rather than elite performance, while offering more
appropriate competitions that empower athletes who need it.
References
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10413200.2025.2560853#abstract
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheating_at_the_Paralympic_Games
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