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Favourite Jason Smyth set the fastest time in qualifying for the final of an unprecedented competition to find the fastest para-athlete in the world, alongside Lagoa Rodrigo de Freitas in Rio de Janeiro on Sunday (6 September)

The Irishman won his heat in 10

63 seconds to reach Monday’s final in the 100m event – part of the one year to the Rio 2016 Paralympic Games celebrations – that is pitching the world’s fastest sprinters from different disability classes against each other

Four-time Paralympic Games champion Smyth, whose world record of 10

46 seconds in the visually impaired T13 class is the fastest time ever posted by a para-athlete, will face Brazil’s Petrucio Ferreira  (200m T47 amputee world record holder), the USA’s Richard Browne (100m world championships and Paralympic Games silver medallist in the T44 amputee class) and Australia’s Evan O’Hanlon (five-time Paralympic champion and world record holder in the T38 cerebral palsy class) in the final

The race will be one of the highlights of the second day of the Paralympic Festival on Monday

Smyth, who now competes in the T12 class as his eye condition has worsened, won his heat on Sunday morning against Brazil’s Felipe Gomes (world championships silver medallist and London 2012 bronze medallist in the T11 visual impairment class) and Browne

“The nice thing was that my time was the quickest, but tomorrow is a different day,” said Smyth

 “I hope I can run the quickest tomorrow

Hopefully lots of people will come to celebrate the one year to the Games milestone

“This event is such a unique opportunity, not only for the athletes, but also for the people watching, because we never see this

It really is something special to bring athletes together regardless of their disabilities to promote the sport

”Petrucio Ferreira, Evan O'Hanlon, Jason Smyth and Richard Browne will contest the final (Photo: Rio 2016/Marcelo Regua) Ferreira, who won gold at last month’s Parapan-American Games in Toronto, won the second heat in 10

79 seconds against the USA’s David Brown (100m world record holder in the T11 visually impaired class) and O’Hanlon

“I will give my best tomorrow and I hope I can finish in first place,” said Ferreira

“But the most important thing is the excitement the event generates and showing people a little of what will happen next year in Rio

”Browne and O’Hanlon also qualified for the final – which will take place at 12

50pm on Monday (7 September) in Parque dos Patins – by recording the next best times, 10

84 and 10

91 seconds respectively

There will also be a B-final on Sunday, contested by T11 class athletes Gomes and Brown, who run alongside guides

A women’s race will be contested by Cubans Omara Durand (the world’s fastest female para-athlete) and Yunidis Castillo (T47 100m world record holder) and Brazilian Terezinha Guilhermina, a winner of three Paralympic and eight world titles

The second day of the Paralympic Festival starts at 9am and will feature cultural and educational events, music, dance, sports workshops and two international sports challenges – Brazil v Argentina in visually impaired five-a-side football and USA v Brazil in women’s sitting volleyball

Click here to see the full programme