Sara Head (born 12 April 1980) is a Welsh Paralympic table tennis player. Head has represented Wales at two Commonwealth Games and was selected for the 2012 Paralympic Games, where she took the bronze medal in the women's team class 1âÂÂ3 event with team-mate Jane Campbell.
Head was born in Cardiff, Wales, in 1980 and grew up in Beddau near Pontypridd. She was educated at Bryn Celynnog Comprehensive School. At the age of 15 Head became paraplegic after contracting a virus. She initially took up wheelchair basketball, but switched to table tennis after a boyfriend introduced her to the sport around 2000. Head's ability at the sport brought her to the attention of Disability Sport Wales who encouraged her to keep training at the sport and also introduced her to Paralympian Jim Munkley. By 2002, under the coaching of Munkley, Head had shown enough talent to be selected for the Wales team at the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester.
Although Head did not medal in Manchester by 2004 she had won the Hungarian Open and two years later she again represented Wales at the 2006 Commonwealth Games. By 2009 she had teamed up with Jane Campbell and along with Leanne Stephen the three women took the women's team class 3 bronze at the 2009 European Championships in Genoa, Italy. Head and Campbell were joined by Cathy Mitton for the 2010 World Para Table Tennis Championships in Gwangju, Korea, and on this occasion they took the gold medal in the women's team class 1âÂÂ3. Head and Campbell took another gold medal in the women's team class 3 event at the 2011 European Championships in Croatia and the following year the two won silver at the China Open. In 2012 Head picked up two bronze medals at the Lignano Open in Italy, in the team and the individual class 3 women's event.
After the disappointment of failing to qualify for the 2008 Paralympics in Beijing, Head made the Great Britain team for the 2012 Paralympic Games in London. In the individual class 3 event, Head came from 2âÂÂ1 down to beat Slovenia's Mateja Pintar to take her to the semi-finals. There she faced Doris Mader of Austria, who proved too big a challenge, beating Head 3âÂÂ0. Although missing out on the final, it set up a bronze medal decider with Alena Kanova of Slovakia, and despite taking the first game, Head lost 3âÂÂ1 to finish just outside the medal table in fourth. In the women's class 1âÂÂ3 team event at London, Head and Campbell faced the Turkish team made up of pairing Nergiz Altintas and Hatice Duman. Both Head and Campbell lost their opening individual matches, but then turned that result around when they switched opponents to level the game 2âÂÂ2. The British team won the deciding doubles set to win the match 3âÂÂ2 and take them into the semi-finals. Their semi-final opponents, Kyoung Hee Cho and Sang Sook Jung of South Korea were too strong, winning in a 3âÂÂ0 white-wash, with Head only taking two games from her opponents. As losing semi-finalists, Head and Campbell were placed into the bronze medal decider, against Italy's Michela Brunelli, Pamela Pezzutto and Clara Podda. Just like their first round match against Turkey, Head and Campbell lost both opening matches before winning their next two individual matches and then came from 2âÂÂ1 down in the doubles match to win 3âÂÂ2 and took the bronze medal.