What Canada Did on Day 3 of the Rio Paralympics: Stilwell wins gold

Stilwell is the only female Paralympian to win gold medals in different Paralympic sports. (Nathan Denette/CP)

RIO DE JANEIRO – What Canada Did on Saturday, the third day of competition at the Rio Paralympic Summer Games (distances in metres):

ARCHERY

Men’s individual compound — Kevin Evans, Jaffray, B.C., are in 22nd with 656 points.

Women’s individual compound — Karen Van Nest, North Bay, Ont., are in fourth with 654 points.

Mixed team compound — Karen Van Nest, North Bay, Ont., and Kevin Evans, Jaffray, B.C., are in seventh with 1,310 points.

ATHLETICS

Women’s T52 400 final — Michelle Stilwell, Parksville, B.C., won the gold medal in a Paralympic-record of 1:05.43.

Men’s T38 1,500 final — Mitchell Chase, Pickering, Ont., finished fourth in 4:28.44.

Women’s T53 400 — Ilana Dupont, Saskatoon, finished 10th in her heat and did not advance.

Men’s T53 400 — Brent Lakatos, Dorval, Que., finished sixth in his heat in 50.47 and advanced to Sunday’s final. Jean-Philippe Maranda, Ste-Aurelie, Que., finished 10th in his heat and did not advance.

BOCCIA

Mixed pairs BC4 — Canada (Iulian Ciobanu, Montreal; Marco Dispaltro, St-Jerome, Que.; Alison Levine, Montreal), lost to Brazil 4-3 in the preliminary round.

Mixed pairs BC 3 — Canada (Eric Bussiere, Vercheres, Que.; Bruno Garneau, Montreal; Marylou Martineau, Quebec City), lost to South Korea 10-1 and Brazil 11-2 in the preliminary round.

Mixed pairs BC4 — Canada (Iulian Ciobanu, Montreal; Marco Dispaltro, St-Jerome, Que.; Alison Levine, Montreal), beat China 3-2 in the preliminary round.

CYCLING (TRACK)

Men’s C1-2-3 1,000 time trial final — Tristen Chernove, Powell River, B.C., won the bronze medal in 1:09.583. Ross Wilson, Sherwood Park, Alta., finished 15th in 1:14.549 and Michael Sametz, Calgary, finished 17th in 1:15.171.

GOALBALL

Men — Canada beat Germany 7-5 in the preliminary round to even its record at 1-1. Brendan Gaulin, Laval, Que., led Canada with six goals.

JUDO

Men’s 90kg — Tony Walby, Ottawa, was eliminated after losing to Jorge Lencina, Argentina, in the round of 16.

ROWING

Repechage LTA Mixed Coxed Four — Victoria Nolan, Toronto; Meghan Montgomery, Winnipeg; Andrew Todd, Thunder Bay, Ont.; Curtis Halladay, Sudbury, Ont. and coxswain Kristen Kit, St. Catharines, Ont., finished first in 3:33.85 and advanced to Sunday’s final.

SHOOTING

Men’s Mixed R4-10m Air Rifle — Doug Blessin, Tri-City, B.C., finished 25th and did not advance.

SWIMMING

Women’s SB7 100 breaststroke final — Tess Routliffe, Caledon, Ont., finished fourth in 1:35.09. Camille Berube, Gatineau, Que., finished ninth in her heat. Sarah Mehain, Vernon, B.C., finished 10th in her heat. Neither advanced to the final.

Men’s S10 100 backstroke final — Benoit Huot, Longueuil, Que., finished fifth in 1:00.33. Alec Elliot, Kitchener, Ont., finished seventh in 1:02.45.

Women’s S10 100 backstroke final — Aurelie Rivard, St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que., finished fourth in 1:09.62.

Men’s S6 50 freestyle — Nathan Clement, West Vancouver, finished 18th in his heat and did not advance to the final.

Men’s S5 50 butterfly — Danial Murphy, Bedford, N.S., finished 15th in his heat and did not advance to the final.

Women’s S5 50 butterfly — Tammy Cunnington, Red Deer, Alta., finished 11th in her heat and did not advance to the final.

Men’s S13 200 individual medley — Devin Gotell, Antigonish, N.S., finished 15th in his heat. Tyler Mrak, Aldregrove, B.C., finished 16th in his heat. Neither advanced to the final.

TRIATHLON

Men’s PT4 final — Stefan Daniel, Calgary, won the silver medal in 1:03:05.

TABLE TENNIS

Women’s class 7 — Stephanie Chan, Richmond B.C., lost to Seong-Ok Kim, South Korea, in the preliminary round 9-11, 11-4, 11-1, 10-12, 11-3. Chan finished second in her pool and advanced to the semifinals.

WHEELCHAIR BASKETBALL

Women — Canada beat Argentina 73-28 to improve to 2-0 in the preliminary round. Arinn Young, Legal, Alta., led Canada in scoring with 14 points.

Men — Canada lost to Australia 78-53 to drop to 0-3. in the preliminary round. David Eng, Montreal, led Canada in scoring with 17 points.

Sportsnet.ca no longer supports comments.