Ryan Estep
Athlete Bio#
Height
6'0"
Age
37
Hometown
Florence, MS
Current Residence: Florence, Miss.
Club: Methodist Rehab
Coach: Les Stawicki
U.S. Ranking: No. 4 (epee), No. 10 (saber)
Wheelchair World Championship Teams: 2013, 2011, 2010
In November, 2009, he tried wheelchair fencing on a dare. “A co-worker said: I bet I can whip your butt in fencing,” he remembers. "I thought ‘no way’ and had to try it. I go to practice, and she beats the crap out of me. I had to keep going until I could compete with her. After the first tournament, I knew I was going to try to turn this into something big just because of the crazy amount of adrenalin it gave me.”
Now, the 25-year-old is the No. 1 wheelchair fencer in the USA and No. 3 in the world. In August, he qualified for the 2012 Paralympic Games in London with a gold medal win at the Wheelchair Pan American Championsips in Brazil.
To get ready for the Games in September, he is working out with a personal trainer, attending team practices at Methodist Rehabilitation Center, training with the Paralympic coach and studying film of fencing bouts. “Six days of the week I’m doing something that involves fencing,” he said. “I don’t want to be just one of the better people in the U.S – I want to be the best in the world. And the only way that is going to happen is through a lot of sacrifice and dedication.”
2012:
2011:
2010:
Club: Methodist Rehab
Coach: Les Stawicki
U.S. Ranking: No. 4 (epee), No. 10 (saber)
Wheelchair World Championship Teams: 2013, 2011, 2010
In November, 2009, he tried wheelchair fencing on a dare. “A co-worker said: I bet I can whip your butt in fencing,” he remembers. "I thought ‘no way’ and had to try it. I go to practice, and she beats the crap out of me. I had to keep going until I could compete with her. After the first tournament, I knew I was going to try to turn this into something big just because of the crazy amount of adrenalin it gave me.”
Now, the 25-year-old is the No. 1 wheelchair fencer in the USA and No. 3 in the world. In August, he qualified for the 2012 Paralympic Games in London with a gold medal win at the Wheelchair Pan American Championsips in Brazil.
To get ready for the Games in September, he is working out with a personal trainer, attending team practices at Methodist Rehabilitation Center, training with the Paralympic coach and studying film of fencing bouts. “Six days of the week I’m doing something that involves fencing,” he said. “I don’t want to be just one of the better people in the U.S – I want to be the best in the world. And the only way that is going to happen is through a lot of sacrifice and dedication.”
2012:
- Gold - USA Fencing National Championships (Epee)
- Gold - USA Fencing National Championships (Foil)
- Silver - December North American Cup (Wheelchair Epee)
- Silver - Montreal Wheelchair World Cup (Epee)
- Bronze - December North American Cup (Wheelchair Saber)
- Eighth - Malchow Wheelchair World Cup (Epee)
- Eighth - Lonato Wheelchair World Cup (Epee)
- 10th - Paralympic Games (Epee)
2011:
- Gold - Pan American Championsips (Epee)
- Gold - USA Fencing National Championships (Wheelchair Epee)
- Bronze - Pan American Championships (Foil)
- Seventh - Wheelchair World Championships (Epee)
- Ninth - Eger Wheelchair World Cup (Epee)
- 10th - Montreal Wheelchair World Cup (Epee)
- 10th - Montreal Wheelchair World Cup (Foil)
- 13th - Malaga Wheelchair World Cup (Foil)
- 15th - Malaga Wheelchair World Cup (Epee)
- 16th - Lonato Wheelchair World Cup (Epee)
- 17th - Lonato Wheelchair World Cup (Foil)
- 17th - Malchow Wheelchair World Cup (Foil)
- 18th - Eger Wheelchair World Cup (Foil)
- 22nd - Wheelchair World Championships (Foil)
- 23rd - Warsaw Wheelchair World Cup (Foil)
2010:
- Bronze - North American Cup A (Epee)
- Seventh - North American Cup A (Foil)
- Eighth - North American Cup A (Saber)