USA TODAY US Edition

In latest shift, Paralympia­n Masters takes shot at cycling

- Roxanna Scott @roxscott USA TODAY Sports

With her dominant crosscount­ry skiing season behind her, Paralympic athlete Oksana Masters is on to her next goal: making the U.S. team for Rio in para-cycling.

The 26-year-old, who trains in Champaign, Ill., is one of the USA’s most versatile Paralympia­ns. Masters, who is a double amputee, has represente­d her country in rowing and cycling in the summer and cross-country skiing and biathlon in the winter. She won Paralympic silver and bronze medals in cross country in the 2014 Sochi Games.

She’s coming off the 2015-16 ski season unbeaten, having taken the overall World Cup globe in Vuokatti, Finland, in March.

In recent weeks, Masters has focused her training on the bike. She’ll compete at a World Cup in Belgium, beginning Friday, as part of the lead-up to the U.S. Paralympic trials, where she hopes to make the team for Rio in the time trial and road race. The trials for swimming, cycling and track and field will be held in Charlotte from June 30 to July 2.

After suffering a back injury, Masters gave up rowing, a sport in which she won a bronze medal at the 2012 London Paralympic­s.

“It was really disappoint­ing when my body wouldn’t let me continue to train at the highest level and achieve more,” she said of rowing. “With cycling I can still be active and compete, and ultimately that’s what I love to do, to be competitiv­e.”

Her results in internatio­nal competitio­n show she’s very competitiv­e despite only taking up cycling in 2014. Masters won bronze in the road race at the 2015 UCI Para-cycling Road World Championsh­ips. She was fourth in the time trial.

“I’m such a horrible time trialist right now,” she said. “Time trialing is one of those things that you’ve got to train for. … Being a new rider, it’s still really hard for me to know what’s the most efficient gear for me to be in. The road race is probably more exciting, in my opinion, because it’s a lot faster pace and people are constantly attacking.”

Ian Lawless, high-performanc­e director of U.S. Paralympic Cycling, says Masters has a good shot at making the team for Rio.

“It’s a rare athlete that can come out in their first year and make a world championsh­ip team,” he said, adding that the USA had the No. 1-ranked paracyclin­g team in the world. “It’s the hardest team in the world to make. I think that underscore­s how special of an athlete she is.”

Masters says she’s building up the muscle mass she needs for cycling.

“I think that’s just where having a base fitness helped me a lot,” she said. “I started doing sports when I was 13 and competitiv­ely doing sports — where I was actually training — when I was 17.”

Her story of endurance and strength began in a Ukrainian orphanage, where she lived until age 7, when she was adopted by Gay Masters, who brought Oksana home to Buffalo before moving to Louisville.

Both of Masters’ legs were damaged from radiation poisoning that was believed to be from the Chernobyl nuclear reactor incident. Masters says she could have been exposed to radiation from other plants in the area where she lived. She had surgeries to amputate both legs.

She returned to Ukraine for the first time in October. “I never thought I’d be able to go back to Ukraine,” she said. “It was amazing, and it was crazy, because the last time I was in Ukraine, I was a child; I didn’t speak English. I didn’t really know what was going on besides the fact that I was so happy that I was getting a family. And then to go back to Ukraine for the first time ever and to be able to visit other orphanages and share my experience with my disability that I have … I can’t put it into words, because I have wanted it for so long, and to be able to voice your opinion, to help in some way is pretty cool.”

She’d like to do more public speaking about her experience­s, but she hasn’t had much free time as she balances training in her sports. For now, she’s focusing on racing in Rio in a sport she’s learning.

“I still have a long ways to go to consider myself a good cyclist,” she said.

A medal or two in Rio might go a long way in proving she’s one of the best in the world.

 ?? P. SOLOMON BANDA, AP ?? Oksana Masters hopes to add to her haul of Paralympic medals in her new sport: cycling.
P. SOLOMON BANDA, AP Oksana Masters hopes to add to her haul of Paralympic medals in her new sport: cycling.

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