Background
Hailing from Longueuil, Quebec, Huot was born with club feet, started swimming competitively at age 10 at the CAMO Natation club, where he is trained by Benoit Lebrun.
Hailing from Longueuil, Quebec, Huot was born with club feet, started swimming competitively at age 10 at the CAMO Natation club, where he is trained by Benoit Lebrun.
In the beginning he competed alongside able-bodied swimmers and competed at two Quebec Games, earning silver in 1997. He added three more gold and three silver medals at the 2000 Paralympics and eight medals at the 2002 IPC Swimming World Championships. In 2003, Huot was named the male athlete of the year with a disability by the International Commonwealth Federation.
In 2004, Huot grabbed five gold medals, one silver medal and three world records at the 2004 Paralympic Games in Athens.
He then went on to take a gold and a silver at the inaugural Paralympic World Cup in Manchester in events that were swum just 15 minutes apart. This led the Swimming World Magazine to award him the World Disabled Swimmer of the Year award.
He was named Canada"s flag bearer for the Games closing ceremony. On July 27, 2014, Huot was robbed in his home in Longueuil.
Among the stolen items are seven medals, including two Paralympic medals.
The athlete then appealed to the public Sunday afternoon on Twitter. The idea of never seeing his medals is "heartbreaking," he pleads. "Those medals represent a lifetime of work.
Hours and hours of work to get them" said Huot in an interview.
As his house was under renovation at the time, the athlete was not there when it was broken into during the night from Saturday to Sunday. The Longueuil Police Department is continuing its investigation.