Iran's Zahra Nemati, right, aims for the target during an individual
ranking round at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,
Friday, Aug. 5, 2016. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)
RIO
DE JANEIRO (AP) — Hours after making her Olympic debut, Iranian archer
Zahra Nemati carried her country's flag in the opening ceremony.
It's
the start of a busy couple of months for Nemati in Rio de Janeiro.
She'll be pulling double duty and will be back next month for the
Paralympics, where she's the defending gold medalist in the individual
recurve W1/W2.
The 31-year-old Nemati had hoped to represent Iran at the Olympics much earlier in life — and in taekwondo rather than archery.
A car accident as a teenager set the former black belt on a new sporting path after leaving her paralyzed.
She picked up archery a few years later simply because, "I wanted to do some sport."
Nemati
started her ambitious journey to a first Olympic medal ahead of
Friday's opening ceremony during archery's qualifying round at the
Sambadrome. She shot 72 arrows and accumulated a score of 609 — good for
49th position. The results from the qualifying round are used determine
the seedings for the bracketed tournament next week.
"I
want to make my goal and get the best result: to make my family and the
people around me happy and let them know I'm OK and I'm strong," she
said.
There's
no questioning her talent in archery. Over the last few years, Nemati
has turned in a few top-10 finishes at World Cup events. Just last year
she was ninth at a tournament in Poland.
At
the 2012 London Paralympics, she captured gold to become the first
woman from Iran to do so, according to the Rio Olympics website.
Nemati
earned her spot at both the Olympics and Paralympics with a strong
performance at the 2015 Asian Championships and Asian Para
Championships.
"I
had a dream to be in the Olympics as I was doing taekwondo before my
accident," she said. "Now, this dream came true through archery."
Nemati
is hoping others in a similar situation will follow her path and has
been named a United Nations ambassador for her role in empowering women
through sport.
"For me, it means a lot to make the people who have big problems in their lives happy," Nemati said.
Arriving
in the stadium in a wheelchair, wearing a green head covering, a
smiling Nemati was the flagbearer for a team made up overwhelmingly of
men.
She
is the figurehead of a team from a country where strict interpretations
of Islamic norms are enforced and female fans are traditionally barred
from attending male-only sporting events. The previous female flagbearer
from Iran was at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver.
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