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Noelle Lambert Sets U.S. Record in Tokyo Paralympics

September 4, 2021
Kenny DeJohn

Noelle Lambert, the former UMass Lowell lacrosse player, just made history.

Lambert, who lost her left leg in a moped accident in 2016, captured the attention of the lacrosse world when she returned to the field and scored a goal in April 2018. Just three years later, she took the Tokyo Paralympic Games by storm. 

Running in the T63 category — a classification based on the athletes’ level of impairment that featured above-knee amputees — Lambert finished in sixth place Saturday morning with a time of 15.97 seconds. That set a U.S. women’s record in the 100-meter T-63.

She qualified for the U.S. Paralympic Track and Field team by running a 16.33 in the women’s 100-meter dash at trials June 18 in Minneapolis.

Lambert told Sheehan Stanwick Burch on “The Stick Drop” podcast that she’s come a long way since competing in her first major event — where she set a U.S. record time of 16.31 seconds at the 2019 World Para Athletics championship.

“Two years ago, it was just me and [Scout Bassett] competing for above-knee amputees,” she said. “Now, going into trials, there were five of us. I want to be running against people that will make me go faster. I’m always psyched to see new people coming in because I was that person. I was known as a lacrosse athlete going into my first event. I looked like a lacrosse athlete.”

You can listen to the full episode here.