Hindustan Times (Noida)

‘World’s oldest’ kayaker eyes medal at her 4th Paralympic­s

- Agence France-presse sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

TEL AVIV: Pascale Bercovitch, who calls herself the world’s oldest kayaker, has failed to win a medal at the three previous Paralympic Games, but said she remains hopeful because “she’s a better athlete at 54 than at 20.”

The French-israeli national rowed for the Jewish state at Beijing 2008, competed in handcyclin­g at London 2012 and paracanoei­ng at Rio 2016. She will compete in Tokyo on September 2-4 in the 200m paracanoe sprint.

She had both her legs amputated at age 17 following a train accident in France. “I wanted to board the train. The opposite happened,” she told AFP before a training session on Tel Aviv’s Yarkon River. She won a paracanoe bronze in the 2020 World Cup, and affirmed her age would not inhibit her from Tokyo success. “I am the oldest kayaker in the world, but I don’t really look at numbers,” she said, insisting she was “faster and stronger” than she was in her 20s.

Maintainin­g a level of fitness that surpasses that of her youth requires discipline, said Bercovitch, who has two daughters. “I don’t eat what I want to eat, I eat what I have to eat. I sleep when I

have to sleep. I live a nun’s life,” she said with the smile that seems permanent fixture on her face. She is known widely in Israel for delivering speeches about her life experience­s, but the former journalist said her “passion” for sport is her primary focus.

Israel used to be a Paralympic powerhouse, winning 69 medals at Toronto 1976.

But the haul has diminished in recent years -- significan­tly less soldiers have been severely wounded in battle than during the initial decades following Israel’s creation 1948.

But Bercovitch and the 33-athlete strong Israeli delegation hopes to surpass the 3 medals won in Rio.

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