The Prince George Citizen

Paralympic champion Adams making P.G. appearance

- Ted CLARKE Citizen staff

Jeff Adams knows there are 1,776 steps to the top of the CN Tower in Toronto.

He should know. In 2002, he climbed every one of them in his wheelchair. It took him six hours to get to the top in a wheelchair designed to move in only one direction. Forward. Kind of like how he has led his life.

The five-time Paralympia­n and six-time world champion in wheelchair racing has used the power of positive thinking and determinat­ion to move beyond his disability and triumph as a competitiv­e athlete, motivation­al speaker and role model.

The 47-year-old Adams is coming to Prince George Thursday night at 7 at the Civic Centre as the keynote speaker at a Canadian Cancer Society Cops for Cancer Tour de North fundraiser, sponsored by Integris Credit Union, Engage Sport North and Canadian Tire.

Adams developed cancer as an infant and underwent radiation therapy which burned his spinal cord. For the next eight years he led a normal life until a playground accident when he was tackled caused an injury which eventually led to the loss of the use of his legs when he was nine.

“It was very experiment­al radiation therapy and it saved my life, but at the same time, and we didn’t know at the time, the radiation burned my spine,” said Adams. “So I walked away from the cancer therapy but about eight years later one of the little burns had some secondary involvemen­t and it burst and caused the spinal cord injury from the bleeding.”

Adams went on to compete in six consecutiv­e Paralympic­s from 1988 to 2008, an occupation he calls, “The best job I ever had.”

In Seoul in 1988 he won two bronze medals (800 metres and 1500m), was a two-time silver medalist in Barcelona in 1992 (880m and 4x400m relay) and won his first gold medal in 1996 in Atlanta (800m) followed by two gold medals in 2000 in Sydney (800m and 1,500m). But the most satisfying race came right after the Sydney Games at the 2001 IAFF world championsh­ips in Edmonton, where Adams won the silver medal in the 1,500m wheelchair race, the only medal won by a Canadian at the event.

“Sydney was my best in terms of raw performanc­es and Edmonton was my home country worlds and just the fact the home crowd was going to be behind me, coming off the best year of my career, it was a really special event,” said Adams.

“That was probably the tightest race I’ve ever been in. First to last was separated by 88 hundredths of a second and the guy who won, won by three hundredths.”

Adams has worked as a TV journalist for CBC, covering several Paralympic events and he’s seen the evolution of large-scale events for athletes with disabiliti­es like the Paralympic­s and 2019 world para nordic championsh­ips, which will be hosted at Otway Nordic Centre in Prince George next February.

“When I first started, the first Paralympic­s was in 1988 in Korea and we didn’t have any coverage and nothing on TV and that sort of grew as I progressed through my career,” Adams said. “London was probably the pinnacle, it was completely integrated and they had sides of buildings with faces of the Paralympic athletes on them.”

Adams competed in his last Paralympic­s in Beijing in 2008, the first year Paralympic­s were mandated for the Olympic Games hosts. He had been to China five years earlier for a marathon, where he learned people with disabiliti­es were never given a chance to showcase their talents. The Paralympic­s brought a sudden and dramatic change in the country’s social policy.

“They went from state policy of denying the existence of people with disabiliti­es (before Beijing won the Olympic bid) to celebratin­g athletes with disabiliti­es in stadiums full of people,” said Adams. “You talk about the erasure of people with disabiliti­es or vulnerable groups of people and that was it to the furthest extent you could take it. People would be hidden away in villages and the disability was really shunned and it went from that to finding people with disabiliti­es and recruiting them for teams. In the true Chinese way, they wanted to be the best at it, so they went from zero to 100.”

Adams works as global spokeperso­n for multinatio­nal corporatio­ns and continues to push for better accessibil­ity for wheelchair users. Despite improvemen­ts in building codes, he says no Canadian province mandates wheelchair access for all buildings.

Tickets for the Adams’ presentati­on can be purchased online at bit.ly/2GNy2Ff or will be available at the door. Admission is $20.

Adams went on to compete in six consecutiv­e Paralympic­s from 1988 to 2008.

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