Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Broncos player Straschnit­zki makes emotional return to ice

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CALGARY Ryan Straschnit­zki was all smiles Saturday following his first return to the ice in a game since being paralyzed from the chest down in an April bus crash involving the Humboldt Broncos in Saskatchew­an.

Straschnit­zki was at the Cowboys N Sleds Charity Sledge Hockey game Saturday, playing on a team with Canadian country music star George Canyon and a group of all-stars against the drivers and outriders from the World Profession­al Chuckwagon Associatio­n, including Ryan’s father Tom.

Straschnit­zki’s team won 5-4 and he scored two goals and had an assist.

“It was exhilarati­ng ... it was just amazing,” Straschnit­zki said after the game.

“It brought back a lot of memories of when I was five years old and laced up the skates. It was one of the happiest times of my life and I was back out there again and just enjoying the moment.”

He joked before the game that he had never been much of a scorer and then he missed a wide open chance before the first one went in.

“It was obviously a fluke goal, but it’s something I’ve got to work on but it was just fun. I was having fun out there.”

Sledge hockey, one of the more popular events at the Winter Paralympic Games, became an official event in 1994.

Instead of skates, players use double-blade sledges that allow the puck to pass beneath. Players use two sticks, which have a spikeend for pushing and a blade-end for shooting.

Straschnit­zki has been undergoing physiother­apy since the April 6 crash north of Tisdale which claimed 16 lives and injured 13 others. Immediatel­y after the crash he expressed an interest to begin playing sledge hockey.

His mentor, former national sledge team member Chris Cederstran­d, who played hockey in the WHL for the Red Deer Rebels and Swift Current Broncos, had his right leg amputated above the knee following a workplace accident. He said Straschnit­zki’s hard work is paying off.

“He’s doing incredible. His progress is something I can’t even put into words,” said Cederstran­d.

Tom Straschnit­zki was excited for his son despite the fact he lost a bet to him in the game and will have to wear makeup and a dress.

“I’m very proud that he did the whole game and now he can hit the net, I guess, because when he was standing up he always missed the net,” Straschnit­zki said with a chuckle. “There’s another positive.”

Cassie Campbell-pascall, a three-time Olympian in women’s ice hockey, was on Straschnit­zki’s team and understand­s the importance of his returning to the ice.

“It’s the crispness of the ice. There’s something about it that just makes you feel better and I think with his situation being on the ice is somewhat therapeuti­c, not just physically, but more importantl­y mentally,” she said.

Money raised from the event went to the Strazstron­g Foundation in support of Ryan Straschnit­zki and STARS Air Ambulance.

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Humboldt Broncos bus crash survivor Ryan Straschnit­zki, left, played in a sledge hockey game in Calgary Saturday alongside Olympian Cassie Campbell-pascall and his dad Tom.
JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS Humboldt Broncos bus crash survivor Ryan Straschnit­zki, left, played in a sledge hockey game in Calgary Saturday alongside Olympian Cassie Campbell-pascall and his dad Tom.

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