Arnu Fourie was just 18 years old when his dreams of playing rugby with South Africa’s famous Golden Lions were shattered in a devastating accident. It took some years to rebuild his life and sporting ambitions, but by 2008 his faith and determination took him all the way to Beijing and the Paralympic Games. Now a proud member of Team Össur, Arnu is a promising sprinter with plans aplenty.

Arnu Fourie - Fast Facts
Fact Description
Nationality South African
DOB April 23, 1985
Amputation Below the Knee
Competitive Class T44
Main Events 100m, 200m
Competetive Highlights See table below

Arnu Fouries Biography

A passion for rugby

At the start of 2003, Arnu Fourie was gearing up to represent Grey College, Bloemfontein, as part of the first rugby side at the St John’s rugby festival in Johannesburg. A week before the event, he tore his anterior cruciate ligament in a warm-up game. Hugely disappointed, he underwent surgery and was left on the sideline for the remainder of the season, unable to play a single game for the team he had dreamt about for years.

While rehabilitation continued, Arnu was signed up by the Golden Lions Rugby Union in preparation for a rugby career which would kick off in 2004. But in October 2003, tragedy struck again. Arnu’s left leg was caught by a propeller in a boating accident, an injury which left doctors no option but to amputate below the knee.

“On the way to the hospital, these rugby thoughts were all making their way out of my life,” said Arnu. “Then, the next morning when I woke up, the first thing someone said to me was ‘The Paralympic record for the 100m is 11.06’. I just wasn’t interested…it was like a whole bucket of cold water had been poured over me.”

The road to recovery

For quite some time the very idea of competitive disability sports filled Arnu with a kind of revulsion. “I did not want to hear anything about it,” he explained. “People came to visit me in hospital and wanted to show me their stumps and prostheses; I would just look away and ask them to leave. It was the beginning of a whole new life for me, but I was not yet ready for it.”

The first turning point was when a friend, one of the school’s star rugby players, died in a motorcycle accident. Standing in front of the hospital praying for that friend, Arnu realized it could have been him, that his own accident could have been more serious. For the first time he felt he still had so much to live for, so much still to do, and so many people still to love.

Moving on he began studying at Stellenbosch. Still struggling to come to terms with things and the everyday practical issues of limb loss, Arnu insisted on wearing long jeans, no matter what the temperature. He competed in his first disabled sports event, the SA Disabled Golf Open. “I won my division, but didn’t enjoy any part of competing with disabled people. They were talking so easily about what had happened to them and would make jokes about it. But I wasn’t ready yet for all of this. I had not made peace with what happened to me.”

A new conviction

With incredible support from his family and girlfriend and a growing faith, Arnu began to turn his life around. A new and positive outlook was reflected even in his clothes. “I began to wear shorts and, for the first time in the three years, I felt that I was happy with who I am.”

In September 2006, Arnu ran his first 100m race as a disabled athlete – he says it felt more like 400m. After months of hard work and perseverance, he qualified for his country’s Paralympic squad, going on to Beijing where he completed the 100m and 200m races. Today Arnu continues to train hard, improving all the time and living life to the full. Team Össur is honored to have you on board Arnu!

Competitive Highlights
Year Highlights
2009
"Curtain raiser" event to Golden League, Paris, France
Gold medal for 100m (T44)
2008
Paralympic Games, Beijing
Fourth place 100m (T44)
Sixth place 200m (T44)
2007
IWAS World Games, Chinese Taipei
Gold medal for 100m (T44)