Education
University of Warwick.
University of Warwick.
In 2005, whilst out with a group of friends, he slipped and fell eight feet on to a concrete pathological Thinking that he had headed home alone his friends left, when he regained consciousness two hours later Aggar phoned for an ambulance. In his fall he had broken his back and suffered a spinal injury, resulting in paralysis of his legs.
Aggar took up rowing as part of the rehabilitation from his injury.
He competed at the 2006 National Indoor Championships using a Functional electrical stimulation (FES) rowing machine, where electrical currents are used to activate nerves in parts of the body affected by paralysis. At the 2008 Paralympic Games in Beijing, China, rowing made its debut appearance at the Games.
After the Games Aggar was one of the British Paralympic gold medal winning athletes who were overlooked in the New Year"s honours. All of Britain"s gold medal winners at the 2008 Summer Olympics were honoured in some way.
He extenteded his unbeaten run, winning his fourth successive title in international events, at the 2010 World Championships held at Lake Karapiro, near Cambridge, New Zealand.
In 2007, at the World Championships in Munich, Aggar won the gold medal in the 1000 m men"s single scull in 5 minutes 13.13 seconds. He beat two-time world champion Dominic Monypenny, of Australia by two seconds and set a new world record in the process. Aggar won the men"s single sculls gold medal in a time of 5 minutes 22.09 seconds.
In 2009 he defended his World Championship title, winning by 16 seconds ahead of Ukraine"s Andrii Kryvchun, in a new world record time of 4 minutes 51.48 seconds.
Aggar went to the University of Warwick where he was a member of the rugby union 1st XV as well as the Saracens F.C. development squad.