National Post (National Edition)

Adams determined to aid other athletes

- Dbarnes@postmedia.com Twitter.com/sportsdanb­arnes

Championsh­ips in Athletics in Edmonton and was a sixtime world champion.

During the announceme­nt Thursday, Adams was particular­ly inspired by the words of Littlechil­d, who viewed sport as an escape from residentia­l school abuse. It brought home how much sport can improve a given life.

“I always thought of sport as a bit of a means to an end, that the lessons we learn in sport get much more valuable and real when you take those lessons and apply them to your families, your real lives,” said Adams.

“So listening to the inductees today crystalliz­ed it for me. It really is a reminder people who are important to me.”

For Adams, sport was largely a way to react to his disability, and in trademark form. He’s a man who has long eschewed convention and believes he was drawn to wheelchair racing precisely because it turns a debilitati­ng stereotype on its head.

“Because of my disability, I was able to sit in an aerodynami­c position and I didn’t have 30 pounds of muscle on my legs to drag around. So my disability was what gave me an advantage, theoretica­lly, over an able bodied person. I can’t think of any other example in life where the physical disability is that which gives you a physical athletes’ rights, to make the transition from sport to business a smoother one.

“I think there is a need for an athlete who understand­s what it’s like to spend 20 years on a national team and there’s no pension and no real help in terms of transition. Some athletes are really successful doing that, but most aren’t. That’s a big problem in Canada.

“It was pretty easy for me, because I recognized it years before I needed to. And I was very, very lucky in terms of the sponsorshi­ps I had, McDonald’s and Bell Mobility. I had good corporate sponsors who made it possible for me to focus on racing, but that also gave me mentors within the companies who helped point me in the right direction and started saying to me, ‘You know, you’re 35, you should maybe think about what’s coming up in the next few years.’ ”

At the tail end of his racing career he founded a couple of businesses, one that sold medical devices including wheelchair­s. He understand­s what it takes to move from one realm to another and that some crucial pieces of infrastruc­ture are missing.

“I think there are obvious, systemic things that could be changed, and we need a transition­al program to go from sport to business.”

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