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・ United States at the 2000 Summer Olympics
・ United States at the 2000 Summer Olympics (details)
・ United States at the 2000 Summer Paralympics
・ United States at the 2002 Winter Olympics
・ United States at the 2002 Winter Paralympics
・ United States at the 2003 Pan American Games
・ United States at the 2004 Summer Olympics
・ United States at the 2004 Summer Paralympics
・ United States at the 2006 UCI Road World Championships
・ United States at the 2006 Winter Olympics
・ United States at the 2006 Winter Paralympics
・ United States at the 2007 Pan American Games
・ United States at the 2007 UCI Road World Championships
・ United States at the 2007 World Championships in Athletics
・ United States at the 2008 Summer Olympics
United States at the 2008 Summer Paralympics
・ United States at the 2008 UCI Road World Championships
・ United States at the 2009 UCI Road World Championships
・ United States at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics
・ United States at the 2010 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m)
・ United States at the 2010 Pan Pacific Swimming Championships
・ United States at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics
・ United States at the 2010 UCI Road World Championships
・ United States at the 2010 Winter Olympics
・ United States at the 2010 Winter Paralympics
・ United States at the 2011 Pan American Games
・ United States at the 2011 Pan American Games (details)
・ United States at the 2011 Parapan American Games
・ United States at the 2011 Summer Universiade
・ United States at the 2011 UCI Road World Championships


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United States at the 2008 Summer Paralympics : ウィキペディア英語版
United States at the 2008 Summer Paralympics

The United States sent a delegation to compete at the 2008 Summer Paralympics in Beijing, China. A total of 213 U.S. competitors took part in 18 sports; the only 2 sports Americans did not compete in were soccer 5-a-side and 7-a-side. The American delegation included 16 former members of the U.S. military, including 3 veterans of the Iraq War. Among them were shot putter Scott Winkler, who was paralyzed in an accident in Iraq, and swimmer Melissa Stockwell, a former United States Army officer who lost her left leg to a roadside bomb in the war.
The United States finished third in the gold and overall medal count, behind host nation China and Great Britain. The finish was an improvement from the 2004 Paralympics, where the U.S. finished fourth in the gold and overall medal count. The U.S. saw significant gains in Paralympic swimming, winning 17 gold medals and 44 total medals, 9 more than they took home from Athens. U.S. swimmers set a total of 16 world records, 23 Paralympic records, 48 Pan American records and 99 American records.〔 〕 U.S. coverage of the Games was provided by the Universal Sports Television Network and the official website of the U.S. Paralympic Team, (usparalympics.org ).
==Disability classifications==
Every participant at the Paralympics had their disability grouped into one of five disability categories: amputation (either congenital or sustained through injury or illness); cerebral palsy; wheelchair athletes (often overlapping with other categories); visual impairment (including blindness); and les autres (any physical disability that does not fall strictly under one of the other categories, for example dwarfism or multiple sclerosis). Each Paralympic sport then had its own classifications, depending on the specific physical demands of the competition. Events were given a code, made of numbers and letters, describing the type of event and classification of the athletes competing. Some sports, such as athletics, divided athletes by both the category and severity of their disabilities. Other sports, such as swimming, grouped competitors from different categories together, the only separation being based on the severity of the disability.
Athletes may have competed against individuals with different classifications in the same event. For example, track and field athlete Jim Bob Bizzell competed in the men's 200 meters T44; the prefix T designated a track event and 44 was the disability classification. Although he finished behind Oscar Pistorius (competing under the T43 class), Bizell set a world record in the T44 classification. For specific classification information, see the pages for individual sports at 2008 Summer Paralympics#Sports.

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