Canada's Nate Riech roars to Paralympic silver medal in men's 1,500m

Canada's Nate Riech, seen above in 2021, reached the podium in the men's T38 1,500 metres on Saturday at the Paris Paralympics. (Alex Pantling/Getty Images - image credit)
Canada's Nate Riech, seen above in 2021, reached the podium in the men's T38 1,500 metres on Saturday at the Paris Paralympics. (Alex Pantling/Getty Images - image credit)

Canada's Nate Riech has won his second consecutive Paralympic medal.

The Victoria native took silver in the men's T38 1,500 metres on Saturday at the Stade de France in Paris, following up the title he won three years ago at the Tokyo Games.

Riech crossed the finish line in four minutes 13.12 seconds, slightly behind gold medallist Amen Allah Tissaoui of Tunisia at 4:12.91. Australian Reece Langdon earned bronze at 4:13.13.

The eight-man field started slowly through two laps as competitors appeared to attempt biding time before a finishing kick.

Steadily, Riech, Tissaoui, Langdon and Australia's Angus Hincksman separated themselves from the rest of the pack, and with 200 metres to go the race was finally on.

Riech was forced somewhat to the outside, where he was able to get past both Australians. But Tissaoui had the most energy left in the tank, sprinting to the finish line with time to celebrate, while Riech edged Langdon in a photo finish for silver.

The 29-year-old Canadian holds the world record in the event at 3:47.89 from May 2021 and set the Paralympic record later that year at 3:58.92.

But the 1,500 is a tactical race, and on Saturday the rest of the field prevented Riech from setting his typically blistering pace.

Meanwhile, Riech dealt with injuries throughout training in the leadup to the Paralympics. In April, he experienced a setback when tightness in his right leg — the side of his body affected by his coordination impairment – forced him to miss about three weeks of training on the track.

Riech suffered a brain injury at age 10 when he was hit in the back of the head by a golf ball, leading to his impairment.

The ailment in April helped prevent Riech from setting a new world record in May in Guelph, Ont., — a feat he'd publicly set out to achieve months earlier.

Instead, he missed the mark by 10 seconds.

On Saturday in Paris, he was even further off his world-record pace. But unlike in Guelph, he'll leave with some hardware: a silver medal.