Colombia Kicks Off the 2026 Season with a Stellar Performance on the World Stage

– A total of 20 medals—11 gold, 5 silver, and 4 bronze—was Colombia’s final tally at the 2026 Dubai Para Athletics Grand Prix.

– Colombia’s first international competition of 2026 marks the start of the road to the 2028 Los Angeles Paralympic Games.

This Friday marked the final day of the 2026 Dubai Para Athletics Grand Prix, where Colombia kicked off the competition schedule with excitement on the field in the F37 Javelin Throw event. Yasiris Blandón secured a bronze medal for Colombia by improving her personal best to 30.01 meters. First place went to Belarus with Lizabeta Davravolskaya, who threw 34.11 meters, and Kenyan Sheilla Wanyoyi took second place with 34.19 meters.

The second medal of the day came in the men’s T37 200-meter race, with Valle del Cauca’s Yefferson Suárez claiming the first gold of Day 4 with a time of 24.07 seconds. Kyle Keyworth of Great Britain took second place with 26.43, and the bronze went to Kenya with 26.37.

The closing event was also a gold-medal finish thanks to Angie Lizeth Pabón and her guide Luis Arizala, in an exciting T11 400-meter race, where they stopped the clock at 59.24 seconds. Silver went to Nancy Koech of Kenya, who clocked 1:05 minutes. India’s para-athlete Ravanni Valasanaini rounded out the podium with the bronze.

For Dayra Faisury Dorado, President of the Colombian Para Athletics Federation, “the expectations we had for this championship were met. Colombia has been growing year after year. In 2025, we demonstrated that we are among the top 5 in the world in Para Athletics, and everyone on this delegation contributed medals that positioned Colombia as the top country in this first Grand Prix. We will also have Colombian participation at other stops such as Notwill and Jalisco, in addition to the Cali Grand Prix in September.”

Here is Colombia’s total medal tally from the Para Athletics Grand Prix competitions in Dubai 2026:

1️⃣1️⃣🥇, 5️⃣🥈, and 4️⃣🥉:

🥇Mauricio Valencia, shot put F34 (12.05m)

🥇José Ramírez, 400m T38 (51.33s)

🥇Karen Palomeque, 200m T38 (26.69s)

🥇Diego Meneses, Javelin Throw F34 (35.77m)

🥇José Gregorio Lemos, Javelin Throw F38 (58.96m)

🥇Karen Palomeque, 100m T38 (17.79s)

🥇Angie Pabón, 200m T11 (26.13s)

🥇Angie Pabón, 400m T11 (59.24s)

🥇Juan Sebastián Gómez Coa, Long Jump T38 (6.20m)

🥇Andrés Mosquera, Discus Throw T38 (54.33m)

🥇Yefferson Suárez, 200m T37 (24.07s)

🥈Yefferson Suárez, 400m T37 (53.39s)

🥈Luis Lucumí, Javelin Throw F38 (56.72m)

🥈Mauricio Valencia, Javelin Throw F34 (35.01m)

🥈Erica Castaño, Discus Throw F55 (23.21m)

🥈Tomas Soto, Long Jump T64 (6.24m)

🥉Diego Meneses, Shot Put F34 (9.57m)

🥉Levin Moreno, Javelin Throw F38 (47.96m)

🥉Mayerly Buitrago, Shot Put F41 (9.08m)

🥉 Yasiris Blandón, Javelin Throw F13 (30.01m)

The delegation traveled with a technical team consisting of coaches Alonso Mina, Osmany García, and Freiman Arias, as well as a methodology specialist and a biomedical team of physical therapists and a doctor. This Colombian national team received support from the Ministry of Sports through the Colombian Paralympic Committee.

Meet today’s medalists in Dubai: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUtKksmkbvP/?igsh=cnZuZTIzNHFkbjQ=