Toronto Star

SEA OF RED

Canada sends 162 athletes in search of gold as Paralympic­s get started in Rio.

- LORI EWING

RIO DE JANEIRO— When Chantal Petitclerc competed at the 1992 Paralympic­s in Barcelona, her wheelchair races went directly to finals.

There weren’t enough athletes to require heats. The Paralympic movement has gathered steam in the more than two decades since, making for deeper fields across the board. But it’s a double-edged sword. Canada, once a world power in Paralympic­s, has slipped down the medal table.

“We were leaders and dominant for the longest time, and what happened was the world caught up,” said Petitclerc, Canada’s chef de mission at the Rio Paralympic­s.

Canada’s goal at the Games, which open Wednesday at Brazil’s storied Maracana Stadium, is a top-16 finish in overall medals. It would be a small increase over the 20th-place finish, with 31 medals, from four years ago in London, but would still be way off the riches Canada enjoyed in years past.

The London Paralympic­s marked the low point for Canada, which had only twice before slipped below the top-10 on the medal table in a summer Games. Canada finished third both in 2000 in Sydney, with a whopping 96 medals, and 2004 in Athens, before dropping to seventh in 2008 in Beijing.

Petitclerc said it’s a combinatio­n of teams catching up and Canada rebuilding.

“If we go from 20th to 16th — I like round numbers, so I’d be happy with 15th — it means we are on the right track, it means that we’re going back to our place of being back on top in high performanc­e, but also we’re taking care of who’s coming up,” she said.

“We are in this phase where we are rebuilding the team . . . my prediction is that we’ll go back to being the strong nation that we want to be, and we were, in two Games (in 2020 in Tokyo).”

Petitclerc, who won 21 Paralympic medals — 14 of them gold — over her illustriou­s wheelchair racing career, can’t argue with the world catching up.

“It’s really good, because what it means is the depth of the sport, and the level of difficulty needed to win a medal, is so much tougher than when I started,” she said.

“It’s great because athletes who win a medal here, in sports that in the past did not have a reputation of having a lot of depth, they can have this medal and go back home and feel proud that it compares to an Olympic medal.

“And athletes, they like it, they’re competitiv­e so they want to compete against the best, and they want the best to be many.” The curtain came down on the Olympics two weeks ago in Rio, where Canada captured 22 medals to achieve its goal of a top-12 finish. Young stars such as sprinter Andre De Grasse and swimmer Penny Oleksiak became household names with their inspiring performanc­es.

With the curtain about to come up on the Paralympic­s, Petitclerc said inspiring Canada’s youth is paramount.

“The level of inspiratio­n that Canadians and kids with disability or older people with disability can get from our athletes and the Paralympic Games is amazing . . . It inspires because it proves that it can be done,” said Petitclerc, who was injured as a young girl when a barn door fell and crushed her spine.

“That always touches me. It’s tough for a parent of a child with disabiliti­es, because you want them to push their limits and you want them to believe anything is possible. So they can see the Paralympic Games with all the disabiliti­es. You’ve got visually impaired people on a bike going 100 kilometres an hour. It’s a very, very powerful human message.”

For a few nerve-wracking days last month, it sounded like that powerful human message might not get delivered.

Olympic organizers were harshly criticized for running out of money, leaving the Paralympic­s cashstrapp­ed and some countries, which depended on grants, in doubt of making the trip.

Just 12 per cent of tickets had been sold before the #FillTheSea­ts campaign, a drive launched two weeks ago to buy and donate tickets to young people. British band Coldplay and Prince Harry were among those who donated.

Organizers say tickets sales have jumped from around 200,000 to 1.6 million.

Petitclerc said she was more concerned than worried about the Games, “because I care about that team and I want them to have the best performanc­e environmen­t.”

“But when we got here in the village, what we realized is: for sure there are challenges, but my very personal point of view is that a person, a city, a country can offer what they have to offer, with all their generosity. And that’s what Rio is doing right now. And what we say is thank you.

“And all the little hiccups, athletes are feeling good, they don’t care if the painting is perfect on the wall. The food’s good, the transport is good, and the venues are great.”

Canada has 162 athletes competing in 19 sports, including two new ones: para-triathlon and para-canoe.

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 ?? RICARDO MORAES/REUTERS ?? Canadian athletes take part in the opening ceremony of the Paralympic­s in Rio on Wednesday. Canada has 162 athletes competing in 19 sports.
RICARDO MORAES/REUTERS Canadian athletes take part in the opening ceremony of the Paralympic­s in Rio on Wednesday. Canada has 162 athletes competing in 19 sports.

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