Regina Leader-Post

Unparallel­ed success for Canada

28 medals in Pyeongchan­g Paralympic­s exceeds previous high of 19 in Vancouver

- LORIEWING The Canadian Press

PYEONGCHAN­G, SOUTH KOREA

On the night Canada’s curlers lost a lastrock heartbreak­er in the Paralympic semifinals, hockey player Billy Bridges was waiting up for them when they returned home to the athletes village.

“Billy gave me a pat on the back and said, ‘You’ve got to go tomorrow and win that medal for us,’ meaning the whole Team Canada,” said skip Mark Ideson, who led Canada to bronze. “And that really put things back in perspectiv­e for me. So (Saturday), we played for Canada.”

The Canadian team of 55 athletes had set a cautious goal of 17 medals at the Pyeongchan­g Paralympic­s, one better than four years ago in Sochi.

But the Canadians blew past that mark with several days still to go and never looked back, capturing 28 medals to crush their previous best of 19 in 2010 in Vancouver.

The athletes credited Canada’s performanc­e to a strong sense of teamwork and a solid group of young stars on the rise.

“There were no down days. I think we were riding the high,” said Mark Arendz, whose six medals in biathlon and cross-country skiing earned him the role as the team’s flag-bearer in Sunday’s closing ceremonies. “We started on this wave and we were riding it — not just nordic, but everyone here in team Canada contribute­d to that as well.”

The 28 medals were second best behind the United States (36). Ranking by gold medals, Canada, with eight golds, was third behind the Americans (13), and the Neu- tral Paralympic Athletes from Russia, who had eight gold but more silver than Canada.

Canada’s nordic team — biathlon and cross-country — led the way with 16 medals.

“Nothing unexpected for us, but it took absolutely everything, and that’s what you want at a Paralympic Games, to hit that peak and get as much out of our team as we can,” said Brian McKeever, who raced to three gold, plus a bronze Sunday in the relay. “We did it and it was great teamwork. That’s been our theme, is teamwork.”

The Paralympic team’s performanc­e comes a month after Canada recorded a best-ever Winter Olympics with 29 medals.

“That gets us off on the right foot,” Arendz said. “I personally love watching the Olympics. That gets the spirit going, and then the closing of the Olympics, and then you’re like, ‘Oh wow, now it’s our turn.”’

The Olympic team handed off the baton, and the Paralympic team took it and ran.

“Following the Olympic Games, you always have that pressure in terms of how our Olympic counterpar­ts did,” Canada’s chef de mission Todd Nicholson said. “They paved the way for us in order to create that atmosphere to be successful here.”

Nicholson, wearing a chef ’s hat and apron — a tongue-in-cheek nod to his role as team chef and leader — said the Paralympia­ns arrived in Pyeongchan­g ready to go.

“They came here, came prepared mentally and physically and in the best shape that they possibly could be in to leave it all on the field of play. Everybody peaked at the right time,” he said.

McKeever, who became the country’s most decorated winter Paralympia­n in Pyeongchan­g, also credited the changing culture in Canada and the support Paralympic athletes receive from Sport Canada, Own The Podium and their various corporate sponsors.

“When I started in 2002, there was very little funding, we were picking up the scraps of what was left over from the able-bodied programs,” the 38-year-old said. “I remember doing World Cup trips with one coach and also I was helping with wax testing and waxing and we were doing it all as one group.”

McKeever, whose remarkable career spans five Paralympic­s, said he hopes Canada’s performanc­e has touched people — and most importantl­y young people with disabiliti­es — back home.

“We can reach out to more people, we can get more support, we can hopefully reach out to more young people with disabiliti­es to get them into sport,” he said. “Sport is great for the spirit, it’s great to just be kids and playing outside, and hopefully now they ’ll start to know there’s a vehicle for that if they want to continue in sport, they can go all the way to the top levels.”

While McKeever and Arendz led the parade to the medal podium, numerous young athletes were all too eager to follow them there, showing Canada’s future in Paralympic indeed looks bright. Among them: Natalie Wilkie, a 17-year-old cross-country skier who won gold, silver and bronze in her Paralympic debut; downhill skier Mollie Jepsen, who raced to four medals including one gold; and Liam Hickey and Corbyn Smith, a pair of 19-year-olds on Canada’s para ice hockey team.

Canada dropped a 2-1 hockey heartbreak­er in overtime Sunday to wrap up the Paralympic­s, and the veterans couldn’t say enough about the team’s youngest players.

“The talent that this game has, looking at my younger teammates and what they can do, it’s so inspiring. It makes you want to keep going and see where the sport can go,” Bridges said. “The best showcase for this game and this sport is the youth that are coming up, and what they do with the puck and how fast they are. What they can accomplish is just incredible.”

Added captain Greg Westlake: “It feels bad today, but there’s gold medals in that room (in the future) even if they don’t know it.”

Pyeongchan­g set numerous records, including ticket sales for a Winter Games. Organizers said the 345,000 tickets sold was 157 per cent of their target of 220,000.

A record 48 countries and 567 athletes — the previous bests were 45 countries and 547 athletes — competed in 80 events, eight more than Sochi.

They came here, came prepared mentally and physically and in the best shape that they possibly could be in to leave it all on the field of play.

 ?? DAVE HOLLAND ?? Mark Arendz, who won six medals in biathlon and cross-country skiing, was Canada’s flag-bearer for the closing ceremonies at the 2018 Paralympic Winter Games in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, on Sunday. Canada amassed 28 medals overall, surpassing a...
DAVE HOLLAND Mark Arendz, who won six medals in biathlon and cross-country skiing, was Canada’s flag-bearer for the closing ceremonies at the 2018 Paralympic Winter Games in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, on Sunday. Canada amassed 28 medals overall, surpassing a...

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