Adam Hills says he will not rule out competing in a future Paralympic Games if para-standing tennis is introduced as a sport. The Australian comedian, who was born without a right foot and uses a prosthetic, appeared on BBC's The One Show to discuss his new Sky documentary Foot Fault, about working as a professional tennis coach when he was 18. In a teaser for the show, Hills says: "I always wanted to play tennis, the trickiest part of that is there was no way for people with a disability like mine to play tennis at a high level, but then I found something called para-standing tennis.

"My mission: have para-standing tennis played at the Grand Slam tournaments, have it a part of the Paralympics and the ongoing quest for world domination." Hills, who will host comedy talk show The Last Leg live every night at the Paris Paralympics from August 28, said only wheelchair tennis is currently included in the Games. "The mad thing is, there are a whole bunch of people with disabilities out there that can't use wheelchairs - if you've got one arm you can't use a wheelchair, you just end up going in circles.

"If you've got cerebral palsy, if you're short statured, or if you're like me, you don't use a wheelchair. "There's all these people out there with disabilities that play able-bodied tennis because there's just nowhere for them. "And so I've been searching for years to find a way of playing tennis against people like me, and then I found this thing called para-standing tennis.

" Hill.