Alberto Campbell-Staines

Alberto Jonathan Campbell-Staines (born 27 June 1993) is an Australian athlete with an intellectual disability who competes in the T20 classification. He won two bronze medals at the 9th INAS Athletics World Championships.

Alberto Campbell-Staines
Personal information
Full nameAlberto Jonathan Campbell-Staines
Nationality Australia
Born27 June 1993 (1993-06-27) (age 27)
Kingston, Jamaica

Personal

Campbell was born in Kingston, Jamaica on 27 June 1993.[1][2] He was born prematurely and at three months was sent to the state run orphanage in Kingston where he suffered from neglect and malnutrition.[1] At the age of five, he was transferred to the Salvation Army orphanage The Nest.[1] He has an intellectual impairment that has made learning difficult.[3] At the orphanage in grade one he was taught by Julie-Anne Staines, a teacher from Australia, who with her husband Paul decided to adopt Campbell at the age of nine in 2002.[1][4] His adoption and Australian citizenship process was long and difficult. The family returned to Australia from Jamaica in September 2003 with Campbell entering on a tourist visa after an adoption visa was wrongly denied.[1] The family flew to New Zealand in December 2004 to be granted Alberto's permanent residency adoption visa.[1] He became an Australian citizen in 2006.[4] The family took the adoption visa case to High Court.[4] In Brisbane, he attended the Citipointe Christian College. In 2015, he works as a Primary Teacher's Assistant at Citipointe Christian College.[4]

Athletics career

Campbell became serious about his running at the age of twelve and joined the QE2 Track Club where he was coached by Annette Rice.[1] He competed at the 2011 Australian Junior AWD Championship and finished 1st in the 400m and 2nd in the 100m and 200m in the under20 age group.[1] At the 2012 Australian Open, AWD & Combined Events Championships he was the only sprinter to enter in all three sprint events and the only one to make it to the final in each event.[1]

In 2013, he competed at the 9th INAS World Athletics Championships in Prague, Czech Republic where he won bronze medals in the Men's 400m and Men's 4 × 400 m relay. In the 400 m, he ran a personal best time of 49.73 and the Men's 4 × 400 m broke the Australian record.[5] In 2015, at the Queensland Combined Events Championships, he ran 50.45. In March 2015, at the IPC Athletics Grand Prix, which was part of the Queensland Athletics Championships, he won the Men's 400 m Ambulant in 50.28.[6][7] He won the Men's 400 m Ambulant at the 2015 Australian Championships.[8] Competing at the IPC Athletics Grand Prix that was part of the 2015 Italian Championships, he finished second in the Men's 400 m T20.[9]

Campbell-Staines has on his bedroom wall Eric Liddell's famous words ""I believe that God made me for a purpose, but He also made me fast. When I run, I feel His pleasure". After his success at the World Championships, he said ""I worship God when I run. He is the one who made me fast. I always thank him after races, whether I win or lose, I run for God."[4][5]

At the 2015 IPC Athletics World Championships in Doha, he qualified for the final of the Men's 400m T20 with a time of 51.94 but he did not start in the final.[10]

In 2015, he is a Queensland Academy of Sport scholarship holder[11] and is aiming to compete at the 2016 Rio Paralympics where the Men's 400 m T20 is on the athletics program.

References

  1. Worthing, Sam (February 2013). "Running with spirit". Pipeline. 17 (2): 9–13. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  2. "Alberto Campbell-Staines story". Sportzlife. 1 (7): 14–15. 2013.
  3. Alston, Jonathon (1 July 2013). "Alberto aims to emulate fellow Jamaican Usain Bolt". Courier Mail. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  4. Furler, Mark (15 June 2015). "From Jamaican orphan boy to God's Aussie track star". Sunshine Coast Daily. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  5. "Alberto races to bronze at World Championships". Pipeline. 17 (7): 42. July 2013. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  6. "Wrap up of the 2015 Qld Combined Events Championships". Queensland Athletics. Retrieved 21 June 2015.
  7. "Highlights of the 2015 Qld Open Championships". Queensland Athletics. Retrieved 21 June 2015.
  8. "93rd Australian Championships results" (PDF). Athletics Australia. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  9. "Men's 400 m T20 results". Italian Open Championships 2015. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  10. "Doha 2015". Athletics Australia News, 23 October 2015. Retrieved 22 October 2015.
  11. "Athletics". Queensland Academy of Sport. Archived from the original on 6 September 2015. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
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