Esther Overton

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Esther Overton
File:120411 - Esther Overton - 3b - 2012 Team processing.jpg
2012 Australian Paralympic team portrait of Overton
Personal information
Full nameEsther Overton
NationalityFile:Flag of Australia (converted).svg Australia
Born (1990-03-26) 26 March 1990 (age 36)
Launceston, Tasmania, Australia
Sport
SportSwimming
StrokesFreestyle, butterfly, backstroke
ClassificationsS1, SB1, SM1
ClubBurnside
CoachShelly Camy
Medal record
Women's paralympic swimming
Representing File:Flag of Australia (converted).svg Australia
World Championships (LC)
Silver medal – second place 2006 Durban Women's 50 m Backstroke S3
Silver medal – second place 2006 Durban Women's 50 m Butterfly S3

Esther Overton (born 26 March 1990) is an Australian swimmer. She competed at the 2008 and the 2012 Summer Paralympics.

Early life

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Overton was born on 26 March 1990 in Launceston, Tasmania.[1][2] She currently resides in Enfield, South Australia.[3] Back in 2012, she was a student at the University of Adelaide where she was working on a Bachelor of Commerce.[1]

Personal life

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Overton has arthrogryposis multiplex congenita,[1][2] a medical condition which "causes muscle weakness and a tendency for bones to break easily".[4] It also results in joints that are immobile.[2] Her arm has been broken more than forty times; she has coped with multiple bulging discs and had six surgeries on her knee since 2008.[2][5] Because of her disability, she has required the use of an electric wheelchair and was in constant pain.[2] Thence, Overton's legs were amputated, one each in November 2022 and February 2023.[6]

Swimming

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File:060912 - Esther Overton - 3b - 2012 Summer Paralympics (01).JPG
Overton at the 2012 London Paralympics

Overton is a S1 classified swimmer.[1][5][7] When swimming, she cannot use her arms and uses her head instead of hands on the touchpad.[2] She competes in the 50 metres backstroke, freestyle.[2][5] Overton is a member of the Burnside Swimming Club.[5] She is coached by Shelly Camy, who became her coach eighteen months before the start of the 2012 Summer Paralympics.[4] Part of her training includes Pilates.[2]

Overton started swimming as physiotherapy when she was a baby,[3] and started competing at twelve years old.[2] She made her national team debut at the 2006 IPC World Championships in Durban,[1][3] winning a silver medal in the 50 metres butterfly and backstroke events.[8] She competed at the 2008 Summer Paralympics in two events.[1][2][5][8] Competing in the 50 metres backstroke event, she finished fifth.[5] In the 50 metres freestyle, she finished sixth.[5] Seven weeks before the 2008 Games, she had a collapsed lung and a day before the start of the Games, she broke an arm.[1]

Overton competed at the 2010 Australian National Championships. Prior to the event, she had applied for an exemption so she could wear a swimsuit that had a zipper. When this was declined, she tried to put on a legal swimsuit and broke her arm in the process but she continued competing with the injury.[3] She competed at the 2010 Paralympic World Championships.[3] At the 2011 Para Pacific Championships, she finished third in the 50 metres backstroke event.[1] In October 2011, she got a new swimming coach.[5] Going into the 2012 National Championships, she was dealing with three bulging spinal discs[5] as a result of swimming into a wall three weeks before the event.[9]

File:060912 - Esther Overton - 3b - 2012 Summer Paralympics (02).JPG
Overton at the 2012 London Paralympics

As a twenty-two-year-old,[4] Overton was selected to represent Australia at the 2012 Summer Paralympics in the 50 metre backstroke S2 and the 50 metre freestyle S3 events.[4][5][7][9][10] She was one of three South Australians representing Australia in swimming at the Paralympics.[2]

In April 2013 at the age of 23, Overton retired from professional swimming. She was forced to consider her future after a lack of competitor interest in her classification led to the cancellation her event at the 2013 IPC Swimming World Championships.[11]

She is an inductee of the Swimming South Australia Hall of Fame.[12]

Overton unretired in December 2023, when she already underwent rehabilitation after her double amputations.[6]

References

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