In March 2007, the Riding for the Disabled Association Singapore (RDA) invited Tan to join the Singapore team for the World Para Dressage Championships at Hartpury College in Hartpury, Gloucester, in England in July that year. At this event, her first international competition, she did well enough to qualify for the 2008 Paralympic Games. In September 2008, at the Hong Kong Olympic Equestrian Centre at Sha Tin, she achieved bronze medals in the Individual Championship and Individual Freestyle Tests (class Ia). These were Singapore's first Paralympic medals and Asia's first equestrian medals at the Paralympic Games. Tan was conferred the Pingat Bakti Masyarakat (Public Service Medal) by the President of Singapore at a ceremony at the Istana Singapore on 20 September 2008.
On 2 September 2012, Tan won Singapore's first medal at the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London, a bronze in the dressage Individual Championship Test (class Ia). She followed this up with a silver medal in the Individual Freestyle Test (class Ia) on 4 September. For her achievements, Tan was conferred a Bintang (Public Service Star) by the President in November 2012.
Tan would also participate in the World Equestrian Games, and would receive a bronze medal in 2014 and a silver medal in 2018. She also participated in the 2020 Summer Paralympics, but would only achieve 5th place.
Early years and education
Laurentia Tan was born on 24 April 1979 in Singapore.[1] She moved with her family to London at the age of three years due to her father's work.[2][3] Tan developed cerebral palsy and profound deafness after birth, and doctors informed her parents that she would probably not be able to walk. Her family decided to settle in the United Kingdom as they felt she would be better able to reach her full potential with the medical facilities and specialist educational support available there.[3] When she was in school, she fell so often and sustained so many minor injuries that her teachers and the school nurse affectionately nicknamed her "Trouble". At five years she was unable to sit and walk properly, and took up horse riding at the Diamond Centre for Disabled Riders[4] in London as a form of physiotherapy.[2] This activity also helped her confidence and self-esteem.[5]
Tan completed her A-levels at the Mary Hare Grammar School, a residentialspecial school for the deaf,[3] where she was a prefect. She also won an Elizabeth Dyson Prize for progress and achievement[6] and a prize for business studies.[7] From the age of 18, she stopped horse riding for eight years to pursue an honours degree in hospitality management and tourism at Oxford Brookes University,[2] and for a job as a mental health worker.[3][5] However, she missed the sport and took it up again in 2005. Tan said, "For me, riding a horse gives me the freedom, movement and energy that my own legs cannot do."[3]
Sporting career
Tan took up riding in October 2005 at the Diamond Centre for Disabled Riders, where she met her coach Heather "Penny" Pegrum. Encouraged to participate in dressage competitions in March 2006, she quickly progressed to the Riding for the Disabled Association (RDA) Nationals that year. In March 2007, RDA Singapore contacted Tan and invited her to join the Singapore team for the World Para Dressage Championships 2007, which was a qualifier for the 2008 Summer Paralympics.[8] The event, Tan's first international competition, was held at Hartpury College, Gloucester, in England in July 2007. She achieved 63% or higher in both her Team and Individual Tests, qualifying her to be selected for the 2008 Summer Paralympics. In the Freestyle to Music Test, despite her profound deafness, she was placed fourth in a field of 18 riders with a best score of 67.94%.[9] In October 2007, Tan went to Singapore for a visit and trained daily at Singapore's RDA with volunteer coach Sally Drummond. Tan resigned her job in June 2008 to train full-time with her coach Penny Pegrum and physiotherapist Anthea Pell.[2][5]
2008 Summer Paralympics
Tan's first Paralympic event was the para-dressage Individual Championship Test (class Ia). Riders in this event are categorized into classes I to IV, those in class I having the most severe disabilities. On 9 September, riding a 20-year-old chestnutgelding loaned to her named Nothing to Lose (also known as Harvey) at the Hong Kong Olympic Equestrian Centre in Sha Tin, Tan scored 68.80% to claim the bronze medal behind the United Kingdom's Anne Dunham (73.10%) and Sophie Christiansen (72.80%). She thus became the first Singaporean to win a Paralympic medal, and the holder of Asia's first Paralympic equestrian medal. Two days after achieving the first medal, Tan collected her second bronze with a score of 70.167% for the Individual Freestyle Event, in which she performed to music with Nothing To Lose.[10] The president of the Equestrian Federation of Singapore, Melanie Chew, described her performance as "beyond our expectations", and that the wins would aid in promoting local awareness of the sport.[11][12]
Tan's win sparked discussion about the recognition given to Paralympians in Singapore. A correspondent to the Straits Times criticized the fact that the newspaper had not elaborated on Tan's performance or what was involved in the event, but had "focused almost primarily on her disability".[13] Another letter writer to my paper expressed disappointment that less publicity had been given to Tan's achievement compared to the silver medals won by the Singapore women's table tennis team at the 2008 Summer Olympics.[14] In addition, a Today reader noted that Tan would be receiving S$25,000 for her bronze medal, a tenth of the S$250,000 that table tennis players Feng Tianwei, Li Jiawei and Wang Yuegu received for their silver medals. He felt that she should receive even more than them, given what she had achieved in spite of her disabilities.[15] The President of the Society for the Physically Disabled, Chia Yong Yong, commented that the disparity between the cash awards given to able-bodied and disabled sportspeople was "disconcerting" and looked forward to a single common scheme, because:
If we persist in having two different standards, we reinforce the erroneous perception that disabled people are different, and strengthen the barriers against building an inclusive society. We cannot build a gracious inclusive society if we continue to deny the achievements of those perceived to be different and less able than we.[16]
On 16 September, Nominated Member of ParliamentEunice Olsen asked in Parliament if there was a difference in the amount of funding given to Olympians and Paralympians, and why Paralympians receive a much smaller cash reward for medals won compared to Olympians. Teo Ser Luck, Senior Parliamentary Secretary (Community Development, Youth and Sports), said that on a per capita basis disabled sportspeople received about S$106,000 in the current financial year compared to S$54,000 for each able-bodied sportsperson as there were 794 registered able-bodied sportspeople but only 16 disabled ones. Teo attributed the disparity in the cash rewards to the fact that Olympians faced higher levels and a larger scale of competition, since disabled sportspeople compete within disability classes. Further, cash rewards were provided by the private sector and Singapore Totalisator Board and were not paid out of state funds. The scheme for Olympians had also been in place for a number of years, while cash rewards for Paralympians were only introduced recently.[17][18] He said that the government was looking at how it could "develop a system to accommodate all athletes that represent Singapore".[18]
Tan was conferred the Pingat Bakti Masyarakat (Public Service Medal) by the President of Singapore at a ceremony at the Istana Singapore on 20 September 2008.[19] At an appreciation dinner on 21 November 2008, the Singapore National Paralympic Committee (SNPC) announced that it was increasing the monetary awards under its Athlete Achievement Award scheme for Paralympic Games medallists in individual and team events, a quarter of which would be paid to the SNPC towards developing elite athletes and sports. As a result, for her Paralympic win, Tan received a cash reward of S$37,500, S$12,500 of which went to the SNPC.[20] She made it into Today newspaper's list of athletes of the year for 2008 in eighth place,[21] and shared the Her World Young Woman Achiever 2008 award with Paralympian swimmer Yip Pin Xiu.[22]
2012 Summer Paralympics
On 2 September 2012, Tan won Singapore's first medal at the 2012 Summer Paralympics, a bronze in the dressage Individual Championship Test (class Ia). Riding on Ruben James 2, a gelding from Germany she had only known for ten months, she scored 73.650 percentage points.[23] Two days later, on 4 September, she scored 79.000 in the Individual Freestyle Test (class Ia) which brought her a silver medal.[24] Her wins brought her prizes of $50,000 (for her bronze medal) and $100,000 (silver) from the SNPC's Athletes Achievement Awards scheme,[23] again leading to comments about the stark difference between the cash prizes that Olympic and Paralympic medallists receive.[25] Twenty per cent of the prize money will be paid to the Singapore National Paralympic Council for training and development. For her achievements, Tan won The Straits Times newspaper's Star of the Month for September, and was conferred a Bintang Bakti Masyarakat (Public Service Star) by the President on 11 November 2012.[26]
2014 World Equestrian Games
On 26 August 2014, Tan scored 74.552 percentage points at the 2014 World Equestrian Games (WEG), on her horse, Ruben James 2.[27][28] Tan went on to win a bronze medal with her horse, Ruben Delight, and she scored around 75.087 percentage points.[29][30]
2018 World Equestrian Games
On 20 September 2018, Tan won a silver medal in the Individual Championship grade I of the Federation Equestre Internationale (FEI) at the 2018 World Equestrian Games, with her horse Fuerst Sherlock. She would score around 73.750 percentage points.[29]
2020 Summer Paralympics
On 27 August 2021, Tan took 5th place in the dressage Individual Championship Test at the 2020 Summer Paralympics, with her horse, Banestro. She scored 73.964 percentage points.[31] She would go on to participate on the dressage Individual Freestyle Test at the Tokyo Equestrian Park on 30 August 2021, also getting 5th place and scoring around 75.060 percentage points.[32]
2022 World Para Dressage Championships
On 10 August 2022, Tan took 4th place in the 2022 World Para Dressage Championships Individual Test (Grade Ia), on her horse, Hickstead. She scored around 73.678 percentage points. She would go on to also take 5th place in the Team Championship Test, scoring 73.429 percentage points.[33][34]
^ abcdeJeanette Wang (11 September 2008), "Laurentia, the perfectionist: Paralympic medallist lip-reads, insists on eating with chopsticks", The Straits Times, p. A9.
^ abcdJeanette Wang (10 September 2008), "First medal for S'pore: Tan claims equestrian bronze, also Asia's first, at the Paralympic Games", The Straits Times, p. B14.
^ abJeanette Wang (12 September 2008), "Bronze once again: Tan can't hear music but she and horse 'dance' their way to 2nd medal", The Straits Times, p. B21.
^Chia Yong Yong (17 September 2008), "Offer them equal treatment", The Straits Times, p. A23. See also Leonard Thomas (18 September 2008), "Stars who break down barriers", Today, p. 49, archived from the original on 1 October 2008.
^Jeremy Au Yong (17 September 2008), "Top disabled athletes get far more funding", The Straits Times, p. B9.
^ abTan Yo-Hinn (17 September 2008), "Paralympic hopefuls in line for more support", Today, p. 43, archived from the original on 28 September 2008. See also Marc Lim (18 September 2008), "M.A.P.'s new route: NSAs will get 20% cut of monetary award, some payouts reduced", The Straits Times, p. B14; Sim Chi Yin (18 September 2008), "Paralympians' feats inspire entire country", The Straits Times, p. B14.
^Valerie Chia (21 September 2008), "Joy ride for Paralympians", The Sunday Times (Sport), p. 33; Lin Xinyi (21 September 2008), "Historic reception", The Sunday Times (Sport), p. 33.
^Her World Woman of the Year 2008: Media Release, SPH Magazines, 6 March 2009, archived from the original on 16 July 2011; Grace Chua (7 March 2009), "Her World Woman of the Year: Not the final curtain call yet: A pioneer in the arts world, Goh Soo Khim's love for dance continues", The Straits Times.
^Shanta Danielle Arul (5 September 2012), "Why the big disparity in cash rewards? [letter]", The Straits Times, p. A21; Liew Khai Khiun (5 September 2012), Paralympic heroes deserve more [letter], Straitstimes.com, archived from the original on 5 September 2012; Terrence Voon (6 September 2012), "Call for equal rewards: Many want Paralympic medallists to reap same rewards as Olympic winners", The Straits Times, p. B20.
^Sanjay Nair (16 November 2012), "Tan aiming higher for Rio", The Straits Times, p. C14; see also Alywin Chew (16 November 2012), "Brazil in her sights", Today, p. 74, archived from the original on 16 November 2012.
Wang, Jeanette (10 September 2008), "First medal for S'pore: Tan claims equestrian bronze, also Asia's first, at the Paralympic Games", The Straits Times, p. B14
Wang, Jeanette (11 September 2008), "Laurentia, the perfectionist: Paralympic medallist lip-reads, insists on eating with chopsticks", The Straits Times, p. A9