Paris 2024 Summer Paralympic Games

Results

Get to know the athletes

Between now and the start of the Paralympic Games, we will be sharing exclusive interviews with our Paralympians from Wales:

Bonne Chance en France:

Athletes from or based in Wales who will be representing ParalympicsGB in Paris this summer:

Sports with Welsh representation at Paris 2024

Visit DSW website

Profile of Hollie Arnold

Hollie Arnold MBE

Sport

Athletics // F46 Javelin

Date of Birth

26 / 06 / 1994

Hollie Arnold heads to her fifth Paralympic Games on sensational form, having won her sixth consecutive world title in the F46 javelin at the World Para Athletics Championships in Kobe, Japan.

Hollie threw a javelin for the first time at an introduction to athletics day called Star Track in 2006, and modestly recalls that it “seemed to travel quite far".

Little did she know at the time what a life-changing moment that was!

Just three years later, Hollie, aged 14 years and 74 days, became the youngest ever field athlete to compete in the Paralympic Games. She threw a personal best and finished just outside the top 10 in a mixed category in Beijing. More significantly the 2008 Games was where Hollie fell in love with the javelin, and from that moment on she has dedicated herself to become the global dominant force in category F46 javelin.

Soon after her family moved to Wales to allow Hollie to attend Ystrad Mynach College to benefit from the world class training and coaching programmes and facilities at Cardiff Met University.

And the training worked, because in 2010 Hollie won silver at the IWAS World Junior Championship and gold at the same tournament a year later.

Hollie won her first world title in Lyon in 2013, gold at the Paralympics in Rio in 2016 (with a new world record breaking throw) and became European and Commonwealth Games champion in 2018 – again breaking the world record on the Gold Coast.

That run of outstanding success made Hollie the first javelin thrower to hold all four major titles in the same Paralympic/Olympic four-year cycle.

In recognition of her inspirational sporting achievements, Hollie was made an MBE in the 2017 New Year Honours, and in 2020 she appeared on ITV’s I’m a Celebrity…Get Me Out of Here!

Career Highlights

Paralympic Games

  • 2021 – Bronze (Tokyo, Japan)

  • 2016 – Gold (Rio, Brazil)

  • 2012 – 5th (London)

  • 2008 – 11th (Beijing, China)

Commonwealth Games

  • 2018 – Gold (Gold Coast, Australia)

World Championships

  • 2024 – Gold (Kobe, Japan)
  • 2013 – Gold (Paris, France)
  • 2019 – Gold (Dubai, UAE)
  • 2017 – Gold (London)
  • 2015 – Gold (Doha, Qatar)
  • 2013 – Gold (Lyon, France)

European Championships

  • 2018 – Gold (Berlin, Germany)
  • 2012 – Silver (Stadskanaal, Netherlands)

Get Involved


If you’re inspired by Hollie and interested in finding out more about how to get involved in Athletics, please visit:








#Inspire


Have you ever thought about what your potential could be in competitive sport?

Are you 9 years old or older with a passion for sport and physical activity, and have either a physical, sensory or intellectual impairment?


If you can answer yes to these questions, then the Disability Sport Wales Performance Pathway team would like to hear from you.

Disability Sport Wales has prided itself on its success at major disability sporting events, winning more medals per capita than any other nation. We want this success to continue, but this can only happen by continuously finding the next generation of talented athletes and nurturing them into reaching their full potential. The Performance Pathway Hub is here is to provide an environment for individuals to learn, grow and develop, to help individuals to identify a sport to participate in and progress in competitive sport, and to give athletes the best possible chance of success at a World, Paralympic or Commonwealth Games. If you are interested in what the Performance Pathway Hub can offer you, please fill in the form below.

Not everyone with an impairment will have what it takes to become a world class athlete, but everyone should at least get the opportunity to try.

Disability Sport Wales wants to hear from every individual who is looking to find out what their potential could be within competitive sport, even if you have never done sport before or you’re looking at transferring to a new one.

Complete the #Inspire form