Team A Step Ahead Profiles


Sarah Reinertsen female above the knee amputee athlete ironman congenital deformity proximal femoral focal deficiency

Sarah Reinertsen
Above the Knee Amputee

Stats:

   Date Of Birth:    May, 1975

Current Home:    Trabuco Canyon, CA

     Occupation:    Motivational Speaker

              Sports:   Running, Triathlon

Sarah Reinertsen was born with a congenital deformity called proximal femoral focal deficiency.  When she was seven years old, her left leg was amputated above the knee. At the age of eleven, Sarah began running track, largely because it was the one thing people didn't expect her to do. At age thirteen, she first broke the 100m world record for female above-knee amputees; she still holds that record along with the current world records for the 200m and 400m in her class.  Sarah also became the youngest member of the US Disabled Track Team.

In 1992 Sarah represented the United States at the Paralympic Games in Barcelona, Spain.  Following the games she took time off from sports and began training to run in 5km and 10km road races in 1997.  She ran her first marathon (NYC) in a time of 6:28.

Sarah has run a total of five marathons and competed in numerous triathlons.  Her fastest marathon to date is 5:27:04 (London Marathon), which she ran in 2002.  In 2000, Sarah graduated from the University of Southern California with a Master's degree in broadcast journalism.  Her first job was for We Media covering the 2000 Paralympic Games in Sydney, Australia.  Following the games, she took a job in New York City working as an on-camera reporter and producer for "US Olympic Gold", a half-hour sports magazine show on NBC.  In addition, she worked as an on-air correspondent covering the NYC marathon live on WNBC-NY. 

In 2004, she attempted to complete the Hawaii Ironman triathlon but was unable to get to the bike-run transition in the allotted time.  In 2005, her training paid off when she became the first female amputee to finish the Ironman triathlon.  In 2006, she was awarded the ESPY award as the best female athlete with a disability and also participated in the CBS award-winning reality TV show, The Amazing Race.

To find out more about Sarah visit her website, www.alwaystri.com


Highlights:

2005

First female amputee to complete the Hawaii Ironman Triathlon 

ESPY award – female physically challenged athlete 

2002

London Marathon - world record

2000

Millennium Marathon world record

1998

NYC Marathon world record

New York Road Runners Club & Achilles Track Club Female athlete of the year

1997

Suffolk County Sports Hall of Fame - First physically challenged athlete inducted

1994

200 meter world record ISOD World Championships

1992

100 meter world record – Paralympics

 

Live Life without Limitations!

 

 


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