| 1st IPC Swimming European Championships | |
|---|---|
|  | |
| Date(s) | 18 – 24 October | 
| Venue(s) | Laugardalslaug | 
| Nations participating | 37 | 
| Athletes participating | 650 | 
The 2009 IPC Swimming European Championships was an international swimming competition. It was held in Reykjavik, Iceland and ran from 18 to 24 October. Around 650 athletes from 37 different countries attended.[1] Great Britain finished top of the medal tables with 39 golds and 94 medals, both greater than any other country.[2]
The 2009 Championships was the first IPC-run event where intellectual disability athletes were allowed to compete since the 2000 Summer Paralympic controversy.[3] In the 2000 Sydney Games cheating by the Spanish basketball team resulted in the banning of all events for athletes with intellectual disabilities.[3]
Venue
The Championship was staged at the Laugardalslaug located in the north of Reykjavik.
Events
Classification
Athletes are allocated a classification for each event based upon their disability to allow fairer competition between athletes of similar ability. The classifications for swimming are:
- Visual impairment
- S11-S13
 
- Intellectual impairment
- S14
 
- Other disability
- S1-S10 (Freestyle, backstroke and butterfly)
- SB1-SB9 (breaststroke)
- SM1-SM10 (individual medley)
 
Classifications run from S1 (severely disabled) to S10 (minimally disabled) for athletes with physical disabilities, and S11 (totally blind) to S13 (legally blind) for visually impaired athletes. Blind athletes must use blackened goggles.
Schedule
.jpg.webp)
| Finals | 
Medal table
Great Britain led the 2009 Championships in both medals won and number of gold medals.[4]
-   *   Host nation (Iceland)Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total 1  Great Britain Great Britain39 32 23 94 2  Ukraine Ukraine29 15 17 61 3  Spain Spain16 19 16 51 4  Russia Russia14 20 10 44 5  Germany Germany9 15 14 38 6  Sweden Sweden8 0 4 12 7  France France6 4 8 18 8  Poland Poland5 12 6 23 9  Hungary Hungary5 4 4 13 10  Netherlands Netherlands4 5 8 17 11  Czech Republic Czech Republic4 2 3 9 12  Israel Israel4 0 1 5 13  Croatia Croatia3 3 1 7 14  Greece Greece2 5 10 17 15  Denmark Denmark2 1 1 4 16  Italy Italy1 1 4 6 17  Estonia Estonia1 0 0 1 18  Belarus Belarus0 2 4 6  Portugal Portugal0 2 4 6 20  Norway Norway0 2 3 5 21  Hong Kong Hong Kong0 2 1 3 22  Ireland Ireland0 2 0 2 23 .svg.png.webp) Belgium Belgium0 1 0 1  Iceland* Iceland*0 1 0 1 25  Slovakia Slovakia0 0 3 3 26 .svg.png.webp) Switzerland Switzerland0 0 2 2 27  Austria Austria0 0 1 1  Faroe Islands Faroe Islands0 0 1 1  Lithuania Lithuania0 0 1 1 Totals (29 entries) 152 150 150 452 
Multiple medallists
Participating nations
Below is the list of countries who agreed to participate in the Championships and the requested number of athlete places for each.
 Austria Austria
 Azerbaijan Azerbaijan
 Belarus Belarus
.svg.png.webp) Belgium Belgium
 Croatia Croatia
 Cyprus Cyprus
 Czech Republic Czech Republic
 Denmark Denmark
 Estonia Estonia
 Faroe Islands Faroe Islands
 Finland Finland
 France France
 Germany Germany
 Great Britain Great Britain
 Greece Greece
 Hungary Hungary
 Iceland Iceland
 Ireland Ireland
 Israel Israel
 Italy Italy
 Latvia Latvia
 Lithuania Lithuania
 Malta Malta
 Netherlands Netherlands
 Norway Norway
 Poland Poland
 Portugal Portugal
 Romania Romania
 Russia Russia
 Serbia Serbia
 Slovenia Slovenia
 Slovakia Slovakia
 Spain Spain
 Sweden Sweden
.svg.png.webp) Switzerland Switzerland
 Turkey Turkey
 Ukraine Ukraine
Footnotes
- Notes
- References
- ↑ "IPC Swimming European Championships Declared Open". paralympic.org. 18 October 2009. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
- ↑ "Medal Standings As of 24 Oct 2009" (PDF). ifsport.is. Archived from the original (pdf) on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 27 August 2015.
- 1 2 "Intellectual disability ban ends". BBC News. 21 November 2009. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
- ↑ "Medal Standings" (PDF). IPC. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 31 August 2015.


