Truro News

Hockey dream still alive for paralyzed Humboldt Bronco

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Ryan Straschnit­zki hasn’t given up his dream of playing hockey.

The 19-year-old Alberta teen, who was paralyzed from the chest down in a bus crash involving the Humboldt Broncos junior hockey team, has been put through his paces for the past few weeks doing physiother­apy at the Shriners Hospital in Philadelph­ia.

Every drop of sweat, every sore muscle is geared toward returning home to Airdrie, north of Calgary, and finding a way to get back on the ice.

Almost immediatel­y after the April bus accident, he talked about playing sledge hockey. That hasn’t changed.

“Really it’s been a goal of mine to wear the Canadian flag on my chest at some point in my life,” said Straschnit­zki, sporting a black Humboldt Broncos sweatshirt.

“I’m going to go back to Calgary. I’ll get set up on the ice, practice the basics to start and then you can start getting into skills. It’s like the rehab process - you start small and work your way up.”

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

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

blade-end for shooting.

“You need both hands to move yourself with the picks and the sticks. You have to be sort of ambidextro­us and be able to use both,” said Straschnit­zki.

“I’ve watched it. It’s pretty intense. It’s a great game and there’s great athletes out there. I can’t wait. It’s a process but I’m willing to do it. Another challenge.”

Tom Straschnit­zki said his son is itching to get his life back to normal. Normal involves hockey, he said.

“Basically, he doesn’t want to hide what he has. He just wants to be a regular guy and hang with the boys,” he said.

Straschnit­zki got to spend time with his surviving Broncos team-

mates at the recent NHL awards in Las Vegas. Although they’ve kept in touch, being with his friends again was special.

“Seeing them for the first time was amazing. It’s like time stops when you’re in the room again.”

Straschnit­zki could be allowed to return back to Canada in the next week if suitable temporary housing is found in Airdrie while the family home is being renovated to accommodat­e a wheelchair.

Sixteen people died April 6 when a bus carrying the Humboldt Broncos to a playoff game collided with a semi-trailer at a rural intersecti­on. Thirteen others, including Straschnit­zki, were injured.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Tom Straschnit­zki listens to therapist Christin Krey during a physiother­apy session with his son, Humboldt Broncos survivor Ryan Straschnit­zki, at the Shriners Hospital in Philadelph­ia.
CP PHOTO Tom Straschnit­zki listens to therapist Christin Krey during a physiother­apy session with his son, Humboldt Broncos survivor Ryan Straschnit­zki, at the Shriners Hospital in Philadelph­ia.

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