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The Power of Holding On

1 articles · 1 outlets · spread 0.00

The Power of Holding On
business22 hr ago

The Power of Holding On

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1 articles1 outletsSpread 0.000 claims
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From the Left

0 outlets

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From the Center

1 outlet
  • The Atlantic

    The Power of Holding On

    How additive manufacturing helped two world-class athletes start training at their full potential Illustrations by Chengtao Yi Two years ago, Anna Grimaldi, a Paralympic gold-winning athlete from New Zealand, felt that she had hit a wall with her training. Born without a right hand, she had been using a prosthetic to help her grip gym equipment. But it was difficult to find something suitable at her local prosthetics center; the prosthetic that fit her best was actually designed for children, and it was created for everyday activities like picking up a shopping bag, not for holding the 300-plus-pound weights she was lifting at the gym. Her teammate, javelin thrower Holly Robinson, felt similarly: She couldn’t find a prosthetic that felt safe for exercise. Both were frustrated: They were world-class athletes forced to train at less than their full capacity, at risk of competing at a disadvantage just because they couldn’t train the way they wanted. Dr. Stafford Murray, the head of innovation at the government-funded High Performance Sport New Zealand (HPSNZ), heard Robinson mention this at a conference. And when he talked to her afterward, he became determined to find a solution for her and Grimaldi. That’s why Murray, the

From the Right

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Outlets covering this story

The Atlantic

First seen

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Latest

May 2, 2026

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