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Five-time Paralympic champion cyclist Kieran Modra killed while riding

"Giant of Australian Paralympic sport" lost life in road traffic collision in Adelaide this morning...

Tributes are being paid to five-time Paralympic cycling champion Kieran Modra, who was killed earlier today in a road traffic collision near his home in Adelaide.

The 47-year-old died following a collision at around 7am involving a Kia car, which South Australia Police said was travelling in the same direction as the cyclist on the Sturt Highway at Kingsford.

Modra is understood to have been riding from his home in the coastal suburb of Hallett Cove to visit friends in Clare.

Born with a congenital vision impairment, he represented Australia in three sports at eight Paralympic Games, the first being Seoul in 1988 where he competed in the 1500 metres B3 and the javelin B3 events.

He took up swimming following a knee injury and in 1992 won bronze medals at Barcelona in the 100 metres and 200 metres B3 backstroke.

It was in cycling where he truly excelled, however, winning gold in the mixed 200 metres sprint tandem at Atlanta in 1996 when he was piloted by his future wife, Kerry.

The pair competed again at Sydney in 2000, but failed to medal with Kerry, pregnant at the time with the first of their three children, fainting due to low blood pressure during a quarter final heat.

Two further Paralympic golds followed at Athens 2004 in the individual pursuit tandem B1-3 and sprint tandem B1-3, and he was on the top step of the podium again in Beijing four years later, where he retained the individual pursuit title.

In December 2011, less than a year before the London 2012 Paralympic Games, Modra broke two vertebrae in his neck and one in his spine in a collision involving a car while commuting to work but recovered to win the individual pursuit for the third time in a row.

He also competed at Rio three years ago, winning bronze in the men’s road time trial B.

Besides his Paralympic success, Modra was a seven-time world champion and won two gold medals at the Glasgow Commonwealth Games in 2014.

Cycling Australia CEO Steve Drake said: “We are terribly saddened by the news and our immediate thoughts go to Kieran’s family and friends during this difficult time.”

Lynne Anderson, chief executive of Paralympics Australia, also paid tribute to him, saying: “We are in shock and we are absolutely devastated.

"Our deepest condolences are with Kieran’s wife Kerry and their three children as well as the people within the Paralympic community, particularly the Para-cycling community, who will be rocked by this tragedy. We are hurting with you,” said Anderson.

 “Kieran was a giant of Australian Paralympic sport, not only because of his competitive success but also because of his wider contribution to the Paralympic movement across multiple sports over many years. He has left a legacy that will live on.

“As an athlete, he was the fiercest of competitors who was at his best when the odds were against him. Away from the competitive arena, Kieran was a kind soul and a great character with a huge heart who loved engaging with people and sharing his experiences,” she added.
 
“In retirement from elite competition, Kieran was always giving back, working as a mentor to the next generation of talent and it was our pleasure that he accepted to our invitation to participate in our Tokyo 2020 Team Processing sessions to share his experiences with athletes aiming for Paralympic success next year.”

“He has left a legacy that will live on.”

British four-time Paralympic champion Neil Fachie described the news of Modra’s death as “heartbreaking” in a post on Twitter.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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3 comments

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flat4 | 4 years ago
2 likes

Sick to my stomach of reading of another senseless death of a cyclist in Australia. Especially one who has overcome such adversity in his life. My heart goes out to his friends and family.

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Philh68 | 4 years ago
4 likes

Such tragic news. Kieran was a fantastic representative of Australia, and of Paralympic sport. His story is one of the most inspiring I’ve heard. Especially his sense of adventure, I loved the story of him mountain climbing on the rest days at team training in Italy, without permission, like nobody would notice the scratches and bruising from sliding down the side of a mountain! Or as his coach described it, rolled down. “Kieran, I’ve seen the video!” Apparently half the descent was sky, ground, sky, ground, sky… as they say, pictures or it didn’t happen so Keiran took pictures and with Keiran it was bound to happen.

The circumstances of the collision haven’t been made public nor have charges been laid, but the comments by police superintendent Bob Gray at the press conference were quite telling, saying that there was no reason why cyclists couldn’t use that highway safely if drivers gave the required metre and a half when passing and that roads don’t kill people, people kill people. The Sturt highway in that area is dual carriageway with wide road shoulders and good visibility. It’s even more tragic that it should happen on such a road, despite the high speed limit.

 

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CyclingInBeastMode | 4 years ago
5 likes

such a lovely message by Neil Fachie, let's hope that if wrong doing has occured then it is exposed and dealt with as the law says it should be.

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