Pistorius pays tribute to late mum’s values

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South African Oscar Pistorius paid tribute to his late mother on Saturday saying that without her instilling solid values in him he would never have achieved his dream of competing at the Olympics. The 25-year-old was speaking after he made history by becoming the first double amputee to compete in an athletics event at the Olympics. Pistorius, who trumped the moment by also qualifying for the 400 metres semi-finals, was watched in the stands by his 89-year-old grandmother, waving a South African flag, whom he saluted warmly. But he admitted his thoughts had turned to mother Sheila, who left an indelible mark on him before she died 10 years ago. “I thought about my mother a lot today,” said Pistorius, who fought a long battle to be allowed to compete at an Olympics running on his carbon fibre blades. “She was a bit of a hardcore person. She didn’t take no for an answer. “She always said the loser isn’t the person that gets involved and comes last but it’s the person that doesn’t get involved in the first place.” Pistorius, who has had little contact with his father Henke since his parents divorced when he was a young boy, said that the abiding maternal principle was ‘don’t start anything unless you see it through’. “The mentality we’ve always had is that if you start something you do it properly,” he said. “The passion that you start something with, you finish it off with.