A man from Bolton who was left partially paralysed after a friend shot him in the head with an air rifle nearly two decades ago has just won his first cycling medal, and is now planning to ride from Land’s End to John O’Groats.
Danny Walmsley, now aged 32, spent weeks in a critical condition in hospital at the age of 14 when a prank by a teenage friend went wrong and he was shot at point-blank range, reports the Bolton News.
The partial paralysis that he suffered in the incident meant that his childhood dreams of playing rugby league professionally failed to come to anything.
Instead, unable to participate in sport and suffering from poor memory as a result of the pellet lodged in his brain, he left school with no qualifications and began working as a labourer.
Danny, who has been encouraged in his rehabilitation by his girlfriend Donna, took up cycling four years ago.
Last weekend, he was part of the Lancashire Road Club squad which carried off the team prize in The Rake Hill Climb at Ramsbottom, on a course that plays host to the National Hill Climb next year.
He finished the 947-yard climb in a time of 3 minutes 16.9 seconds, in between the times posted by his team mates John Bamford and Steve Horrocks.
Danny, who nowadays studies sports science at Leeds University’s Keighley Campus, said: “I have been working hard at cycling, but I never thought we would win something. I am absolutely buzzing.
“Since my accident, I have never felt able to take part in sporting activities, although before it happened I loved sport. It is an amazing feeling, something I did not believe I would ever experience.
“I never recovered completely from what happened, but I have tried to make the best of my life.
"My rehabilitation goes on.”
Danny’s story inevitably evokes thoughts of Greg LeMond, seriously injured in a shooting accident in 1988 who returned to win his second Tour de France title the following year from Laurent Fignon by what remains the closest ever margin of victory in the race, and highlights the role that sport – at whatever level – can play in rehabilitation.
He is now aiming to ride from Land’s End to John O’Groats with the aim of raising funds for the charity, Sands UK which aims to provide support to those, like his girlfriend Donna, who have lost a baby during pregnancy.
Nothing new about zebra [or light controlled] crossing on roundabouts. Sheffield has had them for decades, possibly since the 1970s.
Herefordshire man fined after throwing parking ticket...
Drivers like you tsk tsk
I'm sure that sort of thing will come sooner or later. But presumably a key ingredient (and why you'd turn to a big brand like Fizik) is knowing...
"the cost to rebuild the M25 junction 10/A3 Wisley interchange is £317 million. The project is expected to be completed in 2025. "
I think they did, from memory back in the 70s/80s... haven't seen one for years though, our current milkman uses a standard van, albeit hybrid.
I believe that straight forks that are used on carbon frames are more dangerous than the old steel forks because they are more rigid, the old steel...
Yes, sleep apnea produces more CO... I'm not aware of any doping effect but what do I know....
That's true enough. But doesn't address my point that the chainset you get as a replacement will not physically fit chainrings from the chain set...
In all fairness, it almost certainly NEVER happened…