Lethbridge Herald

Teary-eyed Canada claims curling bronze

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A Canadian curling team that had laughed and smiled its way through a roller-coaster Pyeongchan­g Paralympic­s was a puddle of tears after capturing bronze.

Moments after Mark Ideson, Ina Forrest, Dennis Thiessen and Marie Wright edged hosts South Korea 5-3 in Saturday morning’s bronzemeda­l game, the four raised their arms triumphant­ly. They gathered for a group hug. And they cried.

For Thiessen, a 49-year-old from Sanford, Man., the tears were about his battle with cancer, and not knowing if he’d ever be back on Paralympic ice.

“I’ve had a tough four years,” he said, as Wright reached a comforting arm around his shoulders. “This was very emotional. I never thought I’d have the chance to do this again. My coaches who are the best in the world believed in me, and I’m here today, and got to play for Canada, and taking home a bronze. I can’t be happier.”

Ideson’s tears were for his journey back from a helicopter crash in 2007 that left him a quadripleg­ic. The skip from London, Ont., was piloting a helicopter that crashed in a field near Cambridge, Ont. He suffered multiple fractures in his legs, pelvis, sternum, nose and neck.

“2007, after my accident, I couldn’t imagine being in this position,” Ideson said. “I was a broken person and we were navigating new waters, and without the support of my wife and my family, I wouldn’t have made it here, that’s for sure.”

Ideson, whose wife, two kids and parents cheered him on at the Gangneung Curling Centre, credits skeleton athlete Jon Montgomery’s brilliant beer-swilling victory celebratio­n at the Vancouver Olympics as the moment he decided to become an elite athlete.

“After a life-changing accident, it puts new perspectiv­e on life,” he said. “No matter the result that happened this week, I know that my kids were still going to love me, and my wife was still going to love me, and the sun was still going to come up tomorrow. I was emotional, I am emotional.”

Wright’s story and sunny demeanour in Pyeongchan­g has made her a hero with fans back home.

“When I first started curling, I could never have really seen myself here,” Wright said. “I have had a lot of feedback from home ... My kids and my friends, they can’t go anywhere and somebody will say ‘Hey, I know your friend!’ or ‘Hey that’s your mom!’ It’s just exciting.”

The 57-year-old from Moose Jaw, Sask., was driving on a dirt road in 1988 when she swerved to avoid a grain truck that had stopped suddenly with no brake lights. She was left a paraplegic, and one of her four daughters, riding in the backseat at the time, suffered a serious head injury and is in a nursing home now. Her husband bolted two years later, leaving her to raise her four girls alone.

Saturday’s bronze might as well have been gold.

“To me, it is,” Wright said with a grin. “To me, it’s my first-ever Paralympic medal, it’s going to be my first time on the podium, and I had as many butterflie­s today as I had (in Friday’s semifinal), and I’m so excited.”

Two of Wright’s daughters, Kyla and Tara, made the trip to South Korea, and were among the several dozen noisy Canadian flag-waving fans in the rink.

The four played a methodical game Saturday, stealing two in the first end to lead the rest of the way.

Canada went 9-2 in the preliminar­y round stealing some incredible come-from-behind victories, to finish tied with South Korea and China atop the standings.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? Canada's Dennis Thiessen, left, Mark Ideson, center, and Ina Forrest celebrate their victory over South Korea in the Wheelchair Curling Bronze Medal Game at the Gangneung Curling Centre in Gangneung, South Korea at the 2018 Winter Paralympic­s Saturday.
Associated Press photo Canada's Dennis Thiessen, left, Mark Ideson, center, and Ina Forrest celebrate their victory over South Korea in the Wheelchair Curling Bronze Medal Game at the Gangneung Curling Centre in Gangneung, South Korea at the 2018 Winter Paralympic­s Saturday.

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