World Para-athletics Championships: Dan Pembroke on beer brewing and record hunting

At the beginning of his athletics career, Pembroke aimed at the London 2012 Olympics before this dream was injured.
After a seven-year break and after his opinion, he came to money-sport in 2019. Within two years, a paralympic champion who broke a 69.52m paralympic record in Tokyo became the champion.
In Paris, in his next effort to defend the paralympic crown successfully, he reached new peaks by breaking the seven -year world record of Uzbekistan’s seven -year world record before making this sign better than three meters in his next effort.
A year after this Golden Achievement, Pembroke’s next mission defends the global title he won in both 2023 and 2024 at the new Money-Watery World Championships in the new Delhi, which began on Saturday.
As part of 37 strong British condition– external He turned to India, fighting with the comedy from Paralympic High, entering the championships with “hunger back”.
“Paris was the peak of my career so far.” “It is strange to adjust to return to the other side, because you need to reset your goals and your future goals.
“Four months after Paris, it was very strange and strange for me. I was doing ups and downs, but I was trying to adapt to what I was doing and where to go.
“Not all sunlight and rainbow, it was quite difficult.”
Sunshine is now Ufukta – Pembroke and his wife Martina will host their first babies in November.
The possibility that the child’s trail is in La Paralympics within three years provides additional motivation to continue to work in and outside athletics for Pembroke.
Orum I’m not getting younger and I want to take the most of my body feeling right now, ”he said.
“I think I have the potential to break [world] Register and go more than 75 meters. This is what I want to lead Los Angeles.
“But when I finally retired and I’m not sure when I am yet, I want to get a healthy feeling that I do something good, not just throwing javelin, but I also want to try and change the space interested in visual disorder in society.”




