PARIS — Ella Sabljak thrust her arms in the air after helping Australia win the bronze medal in wheelchair rugby at the Paralympics on Monday, then turned her thoughts to growing the sport.
As one of three women on Australia's team she is optimistic their medal success will get others to take up wheelchair rugby.
''I really hope so. We have a huge amount of women and girls interested," she said after the 50-48 win. ''Moving forward, the strategy in our teams definitely should include embedding women in our team development, all through the pipeline.''
Emilie Miller and Shae Graham were the other women on the 12-strong team, the highest representation of women of any nation competing in Paris in the mixed-gender but male-dominated wheelchair rugby.
''The team uses our strengths. They never shut that down," Sabljak said about their roles. "They know what my strengths are, same with Shae, same with Emilie."
Sabljak hopes for eventual parity with a 6-6 split on teams.
''That's really ambitious. I would love to see that," she said. "The next Paralympics are in LA, four years away, who knows what can happen?"
Two other women won wheelchair rugby medals: Kae Kurahashi earned gold for Japan following a 48-41 win against a United States team featuring Sarah Adam.