Amy Conroy was born on 22 October 1992.[1] When she was young, she was diagnosed with osteosarcoma, a common bone cancer that runs in her family. Chemotherapy failed to arrest the cancer and she had to have her left leg amputated.[2] Conroy tried wheelchair basketball and found that she enjoyed the speed and aggression of the sport.[1]
Conroy made her Paralympic debut at the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London, where she was Team Great Britain's top-scorer in their opening match against the Netherlands. She was top-scorer again with 22 points in the final match again Mexico, where Great Britain secured seventh place, its highest ranking at the Paralympics since the 1996 Summer Paralympics in Atlanta.[1][3]
In 2013, Conroy was part of the team that won bronze at the European Championship, and silver at the U25 European Championships.[1] The team was placed fifth at the 2014 Women's World Wheelchair Basketball Championship in Toronto. In 2015, she won silver in the Osaka Cup in Japan in February,[4][5] and was co-captain (with Laurie Williams) of the U25 team at the 2015 Women's U25 Wheelchair Basketball World Championship in Beijing,[6] winning gold.[7] The senior team then defeated France to take bronze in the 2015 European Championship.[8] In May 2016, she was named as part of the team for the 2016 Summer Paralympics in Rio de Janeiro.[9] The British team produced its best ever performance at the Paralympics, making it all the way to the semi-finals, but lost to the semi-final to the United States, and then the bronze medal match to the Netherlands.[10]
Conroy studied social psychology at Loughborough University.[1] In April 2021 she joined the workplace wellbeing platform Champion Health as an ambassador, with the remit of "mak[ing] all areas of wellbeing inclusive and accessible."[11][12]