• About Us
  • Advertising
  • Support Us
  • Contact Us
  • Community
  • Politics
  • Art & Culture
  • Local Business
  • Environment
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
The Tawny Frogmouth
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Support Us
  • Contact Us
  • Community
  • Politics
  • Art & Culture
  • Local Business
  • Environment
The Tawny Frogmouth
Home » Online Articles » Mali Lovell’s fast track to Paris
Sport

Mali Lovell’s fast track to Paris

Liam CarrollBy Liam CarrollMarch 29, 20243 Mins Read
Mali Lovell in action at the 2023 World Para Championships
Mali in action at the 2023 World Para Championships. Credit: Athletics Australia

In a few months Paralympic fever will take hold, and we’ll be whisked away on five interlaced rings to Paris, the City of Love, the Capital of Fashion, and, if all goes to plan, the home of a Paralympic medal for Allambie’s 19-year-old Mali Lovell. 

Most recently, Mali was honoured to be named the winner of the Amy Winters Female Para-athlete of the year for 2023 from Athletics Australia. She will be competing at the World Para Championships in Kobe, Japan from 17-24 May, and at the ACT Championships in January she achieved another Paralympic ‘A’ qualifier, which basically means she has achieved all the qualifying times and requirements to be eligible for the Paris games. 

Mali’s journey to international athletic competition was however very slow out of the starting blocks. “My first ever race was at David Thomas Reserve, when I was in Kindy,” recalls Mali. “I came dead last by a very long way, probably about 50metres!” The fact she was even running at all by 5 years of age was a huge feat to begin with. 

“Mali was born with ataxic cerebral palsy,” explains her mum, Melissa. This affects the cerebellum, which for Mali is about half the size it would otherwise be. This in turn affects speech, balance, coordination, everything related to motor function, movement regulation, and balance control. “In many ways, Mali was the perfect baby,” says Melissa. “She didn’t move! I could have left her on the change table, gone to make dinner, and she’d still be there. For the record, I never did that!” 

Mali was also very slow to talk. The Lovell family developed their own sign language, replete with a picture book they took to preschool at age 3 so the teachers could communicate with Mali and know what each bespoke Lovell family sign actually meant. Around the same time, Mali first started to walk. “She was like a newborn foal,” recalls Mel. And running was not something that would come early or naturally, but thanks to dedicated physio and occupational therapy, and countless hours of pushing a wheelbarrow – sometimes filled with bricks – up and down the driveway, Mali’s newborn foal steps became more confident, assured, and fast!

At 12 years of age, good friend, fantastic runner, and current training partner, Olivia Inkster, and her mother Alina, noticed there was a Para section of Little Athletics, and encouraged Mali to give it a go. Little Athletics at Narrabeen becoming a staple. The newborn foal was suddenly on track to Phar Lap supremacy. Her lightning pace secured an invite to the Cerebral Palsy World Games in Spain in 2018, narrowly missing a spot in the Tokyo Paralympics in 2020, securing a NSW Institute of Sport scholarship at age 17, and taking the T36 category by storm at last year’s World Championships, also in Paris, coming out of nowhere to win Silver.

When not training under the expert guidance of track superstar Melinda Gainsford-Taylor and coach Katie Edwards, Mali’s inspiring others by volunteering at Cerebral Palsy Alliance, and working at Rebel Sports, whose partnership with Athletics Australia assists athletes secure work that can best fit in around busy training and competition schedules. But Mali’s prime focus from now till the finish line in Paris is clear, “There’s a lot of training ahead, some more qualifiers,” says Mali. “But if I can get stronger, become faster out of the blocks, I know I’ll have a chance of a spot on the podium.” 

Issue 37 Paralympics
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

Related Posts

Manly Surf School: Front foot, safety first

Cromer’s Top Gun Cooper Ottaway

Beaches local Lara Giltinan tearing up the US Pickleball scene

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Stories from Past Tawnies

Album Review: Redhook, Fall Out Boy & Leon Bridges

May 24, 2023

How to smile in the face of ecological collapse

September 26, 2025

Sick of Plastic? So Are We!

August 20, 2021

2022 Lifeline High Schools’ Surf Challenge

April 26, 2022

Royal Far West marks 100 years of support for country kids

November 27, 2024

Ovarian cancer: The deadliest cancer for women in Australia

December 31, 2024

It’s time for the Northern Beaches to prepare for Bushfire season

September 27, 2023

A wallflower of epic proportions

October 27, 2022

Be Centre: Child-led Play Therapy

November 27, 2023

Will Sydney Water do the right thing?

September 26, 2024

Meet Culture Map Live artist Georgina Hart  

August 28, 2024

Aussie ingenuity leads to COVID killing disinfectant

September 27, 2021

Why you can bank on a mortgage broker for the best possible loan

April 27, 2022

Secure your home loan in 15 minutes!

August 28, 2021

21 years of Freshwater community banking

July 19, 2023
Our Mag

Online Articles

Back Issues

Media

Advertising

Advertising

Media Kit

Say Hi!

Contact Us

Support Us

Tip Jar

Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
© 2026 The Tawny Frogmouth

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.