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Brent Lakatos of Canada crosses the line to win in the Mens 100m T53 final at the London 2017 Para Athletics Championships.

Brent Lakatos

Athletics
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Lakatos has competed at no fewer than five World Championships, dating back to 2006. He has finished on the podium every single time, but London 2017 was undoubtedly his best yet.

The Canadian dominated the men’s T53 class winning the 100m, 200m, 400m and 800m – one of only three Para athletes (alongside Walid Ktila and Tatyana McFadden) to win four gold medals.

Earlier in the year Lakatos had given a great indication of his form when he smashed five world records over 10 days racing in Switzerland, including the men’s 1,500m T53/54. Lakatos crossed the line in 2:51.84 – taking more than two seconds off the previous mark set by Swiss racer Marcel Hug back in 2010.

In Athens 2004 and Beijing 2008 Lakatos, a former wheelchair basketball player, had finished out of the medals. But London 2012 proved a turning point for the then 32-year-old when he finished second in the 200m, 400m and 800m T53.

He went on to win four golds and a silver at the Lyon 2013 World Championships, then days later he set a new 100m T53 world record (14.34) in London’s Olympic Stadium during the Anniversary Games.

In 2014 Lakatos, who is married to British Para athlete Stef Reid, maintained his scintillating form. In May that year, at Nottwil Grand Prix in Switzerland, he lowered his own 100m world record by 0.17 seconds.

Success continued in 2015, with three gold medals on home soil at the Parapan Am Games in August. Lakatos won the 100m, 400m and 800m T53 in Canada and headed to the Doha World Championships two months later where he claimed gold in three out of four events, losing out to China’s Li Huzhao over 400m.

By Rio 2016 Lakatos had another great rival in Pongsakorn Paeyo and it was the Thai who came out on top in the 400m and 800m, while Lakatos claimed 100m T53 gold. Less than a year later and back at the London Stadium for the World Championships, Lakatos turned the tables on Paeyo and achieved a clean sweep of individual titles.

Biography

Impairment information

Origin of Impairment
Acquired
Classification
T53

Further personal information

Family
Wife Stefanie Reid
Residence
Loughborough, ENG
Occupation
Athlete, Consultant, Information Technology
Languages
English, French

Sport specific information

When and where did you begin this sport?
He continued to play sport after his accident at age six. He was first introduced to wheelchair racing by Paralympic champion Andre Viger at age 15 and began training full-time in 2004.
Why this sport?
"I entered my first race - a local five kilometre event against six or seven other racers. I thought I would win easily but it didn't quite turn out that way. I finished dead last, behind even all the girls. But from that first race onwards, I was hooked. I would play wheelchair basketball during the winter and race during the summer. Then I realised I had taken basketball as far as I could. I was fast in wheelchair racing, fast at basketball and I needed to give wheelchair racing my full attention instead of splitting my time leading up to the Athens Paralympics. I knew if I wanted to make the team, I had to make some changes. I love racing."

General interest

Memorable sporting achievement
Winning gold at the 2016 Paralympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. (athletics.ca, 07 Nov 2019)
Hero / Idol
Canadian wheelchair racers Andre Viger and Chantal Petitclerc. (paralympic.org, 26 Apr 2015)
Injuries
In May 2015 he was hospitalised due to an illness while he was at an event in Arbon, Switzerland. Bad health continued to disrupt his training throughout 2015. (paralympic.org, 24 Feb 2016)
Awards and honours
He was named the 2017 Athlete of the Year by Athletics Canada. He was also named the Para Athlete of the Year in Wheelchair Events by Athletics Canada in 2017, 2018 and 2019. (paralympic.ca, 06 Jun 2018; athletics.ca, 06 Jan 2021)
Other sports
He played wheelchair basketball for the University of Texas in the United States of America, and helped the team win the 2002 national title. (paralympic.ca, 11 Aug 2012)
Famous relatives
His wife Stefanie Reid represented Great Britain in athletics at the 2012 and 2016 Paralympic Games. His sister competed in swimming for the University of Illinois in Champaign, IL, United States of America. (cbc.ca, 05 Oct 2020; paralympic.org, 25 Feb 2015; independent.co.uk, 09 Sep 2012)
Ambitions
To win a medal at the 2020 Paralympic Games in Tokyo. (athletics.ca, 20 Feb 2019)
Impairment
At age six he was involved in a skating accident. The impact of hitting the ice caused a blood clot to form in his spine, which resulted in paralysis. He began participating in Para athletics in 1996 during the northern hemisphere summers but didn't enter any events until 2003, when he became the Canadian champion in the 100m. (paralympic.ca, 11 Nov 2010)
Other information
RETIREMENT THOUGHTS
He has considered retiring from the sport after the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo. "It's tough to keep training every day. It's always been the hardest part for me. The motivation to go out and do it every day. To work hard and put your body through the pain each day, it doesn't get any easier as I get older. I think I'm ready to stop that. I haven't stopped liking racing at the least, I still love it, but it might be time to think of family and what's next." (athletics.ca, 07 Nov 2019)

BALANCING SPORT WITH WORK
He has a degree in software engineering and works as a consultant. Based in Loughborough, England, he balances morning training sessions with afternoons spent working and communicating with colleagues in the United States of America. "I think I'd go crazy if I wasn't working. I would do my training, then I would come back and I guess I would have to just think about my training for the rest of the day. It might put more pressure on me, it might drive me crazy or make me bored, but with work I get to come home and completely switch gears and think about something else and take my mind off racing. I work as a software consultant because of the freedom it gives me in my racing career. Paying my bills never depends on my results, which means I can take risks and I can do things on my own terms." (paralympic.org, 13 Aug 2016; cbc.ca, 31 Jul 2019)

CHANGE IN DISCIPLINE
Formerly a sprinter, taking world records in 100m and 200m events, he has progressed into longer distances. He has held world records in 400m, 800m and 1500m, and won the 2018 Berlin Marathon. He is now aiming to compete in the marathon at the 2020 Paralympic Games in Tokyo. "I know sprints to marathon is an unusual transition, but I did some research, crunched some numbers, and decided I had a chance. But there were some things I needed to work on. The obvious one being endurance. I decided to invest some time in changing my pushing technique. There were no guarantees. Not only was I unsure if I would be competitive at the longer races, I was worried my competitors would catch up to me in the sprints because I wasn't able to focus as much on them." (cbc.ca, 31 Jul 2019)

Results

Unit Date Rank
Athens 2004 Paralympic Games (Athens, Greece)
Event Medal Unit Date Rank
Men's 100 m T54 Heat 4 7
Men's 200 m T54 Heat 1 7
Men's 4x100 m T53-54 Heat 2 2
Men's 4x100 m T53-54 Final Round 4
Men's 4x400 m T53-54 Heat 2 3
IPC Athletics World Championships Assen 2006 (Assen, Netherlands)
Event Medal Unit Date Rank
Men's 800 m T53 Final Round 9999
Men's 4x100 m T53-54 Heat 3 3
Men's 800 m T53 Heat 3 3
Men's 400 m T53 Final Round 5
Men's 400 m T53 Heat 3 1
Men's 100 m T53 Heat 2 2
Men's 100 m T53 Final Round 3
Men's 200 m T53 Heat 2 2
Men's 200 m T53 Final Round 4
Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games (Beijing, China)
Event Medal Unit Date Rank
Men's 100 m T53 Heat 1 2
Men's 100 m T53 Final Round 6
Men's 200 m T53 Heat 2 4
Men's 200 m T53 Final Round 5
Men's 400 m T53 Heat 1 2
Men's 400 m T53 Final Round 5
2011 IPC Athletics World Championships (Christchurch, New Zealand)
Event Medal Unit Date Rank
Men's 100 m T53 Heat 2 2011-01-22 1
Men's 100 m T53 Final 2011-01-24 3
Men's 200 m T53 Heat 2 2011-01-25 1
Men's 200 m T53 Final 2011-01-26 2
London 2012 Paralympic Games (London, Great Britain)
Event Medal Unit Date Rank
Men's 400 m T53 Heat 3 2012-09-02 1
Men's 400 m T53 Final Round 2012-09-02 2
Men's 100 m T53 Heat 2 2012-09-03 1
Men's 100 m T53 Final Round 2012-09-03 5
Men's 800 m T53 Heat 1 2012-09-04 3
Men's 800 m T53 Final Round 2012-09-05 2
Men's 200 m T53 Heat 1 2012-09-07 2
Men's 200 m T53 Final Round 2012-09-07 2
Men's 4x400 m T53/54 Heat 2 2012-09-08 2
IPC Athletics World Championships (Lyon, France)
Event Medal Unit Date Rank
Men's 400 m T53 Semifinal 3 2013-07-21 2
Men's 400 m T53 Final 1 2013-07-21 1
Men's 800 m T53 Semifinal 1 2013-07-22 7
Men's 800 m T53 Final 1 2013-07-22 2
Men's 200 m T53 Semifinal 2 2013-07-23 1
Men's 200 m T53 Final 1 2013-07-24 1
Men's 100 m T53 Semifinal 1 2013-07-25 1
Men's 100 m T53 Final 1 2013-07-26 1
Men's 4x400 m T53/54 Semifinal 1 2013-07-27 2
Men's 4x400 m T53/54 Final 1 2013-07-27 1
IPC Athletics 2015 World Championships (Doha, Qatar)
Event Medal Unit Date Rank
Men's 100 m T53 Final 1 2015-10-22 1
Men's 100 m T53 Heat 2 2015-10-22 1
Men's 200 m T53 Heat 2 2015-10-25 1
Men's 200 m T53 Final 1 2015-10-25 1
Men's 400 m T53 Heat 2 2015-10-27 2
Men's 400 m T53 Final 1 2015-10-27 2
Men's 800 m T53 Heat 3 2015-10-29 6
Men's 800 m T53 Final 1 2015-10-29 1
Rio 2016 Paralympic Games (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)
Event Medal Unit Date Rank
Men's 100 m T53 Final Round 2016-09-09 1
Men's 100 m T53 Heat 3 2016-09-09 1
Men's 400 m T53 Heat 1 2016-09-10 1
Men's 400 m T53 Final Round 2016-09-11 2
Men's 800 m T53 Heat 2 2016-09-14 1
Men's 800 m T53 Final Round 2016-09-15 3
Men's 4x400 m T53/54 Heat 1 2016-09-16 3
Men's 4x400 m T53/54 Final Round 2016-09-17 3
World Para Athletics Championships London 2017 (London, Great Britain)
Event Medal Unit Date Rank
Men's 1500 m T54 Heat 1 2017-07-16 1
Men's 200 m T53 Final 1 2017-07-16 1
Men's 200 m T53 Heat 2 2017-07-16 2
Men's 1500 m T54 Final 1 2017-07-16 5
Men's 400 m T53 Heat 2 2017-07-18 4
Men's 400 m T53 Final 1 2017-07-18 1
Men's 800 m T53 Heat 1 2017-07-19 1
Men's 800 m T53 Final 1 2017-07-20 1
Men's 100 m T53 Heat 1 2017-07-23 1
Men's 100 m T53 Final 1 2017-07-23 1