Daily Dispatch

Roach finds his Mark for Games

- By BARBARA HOLLANDS

A DEAF East London champion swimmer, who has also lost the sight in one eye, has been selected to represent South Africa at the Deaflympic­s in Turkey in two weeks’ time, and will soon be jetting off to make his swimming dream come true.

Mark Roach, 20, now a secondyear animation student in Cape Town, said he had been training up to four hours a day in the hopes of qualifying for his second Deaflympic Games and that being accepted was “a massive honour”.

“After qualifying at trials I was selected to represent my country in Turkey for the 23rd Summer Deaflympic Games and I am so thankful to have been selected for this prestigiou­s event. Sadly, due to a lack of funding we will not be supported and are required to pay for our- selves. Every donation will greatly appreciate­d,” he said.

He has participat­ed in the Deaflympic­s before, when he was selected as part of the South African team as a 16-year-old schoolboy in Bulgaria in 2013.

“He did very well even though he was just a teenager,” said East London coach Vionne Skinner who will be accompanyi­ng the South African team to the Deaflympic­s as coach and manager. She said Roach had also performed well in the Deaf World Championsh­ips in Portugal eight years ago.

His mother, Joy Roach, said her son had been profoundly [more than 90%] deaf since birth.

“He hears absolutely nothing without his cochlear device. While swimming, he is without his device and can’t hear at all.”

Roach said her son had adjusted well to his deafness and that most be people were unaware he could not hear them, thanks to the cochlear implant and his lip-reading prowess.

The tall young swimmer who is described as “strong and discipline­d” by Skinner, lost the sight in one eye while in high school.

“He suffered a giant retinal tear while diving into our pool,” said his mother. “Poor balance associated with his deafness means he used his eyes to keep level and upright and the lack of stereoscop­ic vision makes it difficult which is not easy for a 6’4 [1.93-metre] young man, but he is like a fish in water.”

Skinner, who started coaching Roach when he was four years old, said despite this setback, the swimmer reached the finals at the Deaf World Championsh­ips in Texas in 2013. —

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