B.C. wheelchair basketball Paralympian excited for Paris - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 21, 2024, 04:34 PM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

B.C. wheelchair basketball Paralympian excited for Paris

Wheelchair basketball Paralympian Kady Dandeneau shares her physical and mental preparations heading toward the 2024 Paris Games and how a former coach sparked her passion for the sport.

Team Canadas wheelchair basketball team is set to play its first game Aug. 29

A woman with blond hair wearing a black-and-red sports uniform sits in a wheelchair holding a basketball in her left hand.
Kady Dandeneau's game-high 36 points led the Canadian women's wheelchair basketball team to an 85-39 win over Brazil on Wednesday in their Americas Cup opener on July 13, 2022 (@wheelchairbasketballcanada/Instagram )

Kady Dandeneau has been dribbling basketballs and swishing hoops sinceher early teens, with dreams of apromising career.

From 2007 to 2013,she played for the University of Northern British Columbia (UNBC) Timberwolves, butDandeneau was forced to abandon the sport she loved after repeated severe knee injuries, including major tears of her ACL and MCL,brought it to an end.

In 2015,the then 25-year-old B.C. native from Pender Islandstarted playing wheelchair basketball.

Dandeneau credits her former coach, Tim Frick, with introducing her to the sportand getting her back into the game.

"He was the one who pushed me to get started in this, and I owe it to him. He's the one who has helped me when I was starting from the bottom and now he's here while I'm much more of an impactplayer."

Earlier this year, Dandeneau led the scoring in the qualifying tournament for the 2024 Paralympic Games with 25.3 points per game, was the top three-point shooter and ranked third in rebounds and assists.

With the Paralympic Games set to start Wednesday, Dandeneau and her team have been training and preparing.

She says training camps have been intensive, with daily cardio, on-court shooting drills, and weight lifting sessions, which have given her "quite a good push this summer."

A blond woman in a wheelchair wearing a #13 Team Canada white jersey with red lettering is surrounded by teammates and opponents in wheelchairs as she shoots for the basket.
Kady Dandeneau of Team Canada shoots on day 7 of the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games at Ariake Arena on August 31, 2021 in Tokyo, Japan. (Naomi Baker/Getty Images)

Dandeneau says she's alsopreparing mentally.

"The goalwould be gold, but I think for us, we're just going to take it one step at a time," she says. "What you're doing in the moment, let's make that the best we can make it, and then you go from there."

This is Dandenau's second time competing in the Olympics. Shelast played in the 2020 Tokyo Paralympic Games, where she and her team came fifth in women's wheelchair basketball.

Dandenau says Frick has been a big part of her success.

Frick, who also coached Terry Fox and Rick Hansen in volleyball and track during their younger years,was the coach of Canada's women's wheelchair basketball team when itwonthreestraight Paralympic medals in 1992, 1996 and 2000 andtook bronze in 2004. Frick also helped the team winfour straight world championships(from 1994 to 2006).

After moving to Pender Island to retire, Fricksays he heard a local school in the area needed a basketball coach and signed up shortly afterwards.

Once a year,Frick would help a couple of Paralympic athletes train for a week, and he says that's when he heard about Dandeneau.

A group of four women in wheelchairs standing around a man wearing a black polo shirt kneeling speaking.
Tim Frick, who coached Terry Fox and Rick Hansen in their younger years, led Canada to four Paralympic medals in wheelchair basketball. (Canadian Paralympic Committee)

After finding out about her knee injury, Fricksays he persisted in trying to convince her to try out wheelchair basketballand succeeded.

"She absolutely fell in love with the game. She pestered me to get in the gym every chance we could to learn the chair skills, to learn how to handle the ball."

Pender Island has a small population of just over 2,000 people but is a hotspotfor wheelchair basketball in the province.In February,the podcastThis is Vancouver Islandreported that a fifth of wheelchair basketball players at the B.C. Winter Games were from the island.

Dandenau says Frick continues to bring more Pender kids into wheelchair basketball.

"Which is hilarious. It's so funny that we have this tiny island but somehow managed to produce so many wheelchair basketball athletes."

This year, a fifth of the wheelchair basketball players at the B.C. Winter Games are from Pender Island but Pender has nowhere near a fifth of the provinces population. Kathryn Marlow looks into the basketball boom for the latest episode of This is Vancouver Island.

Dandeneau says it's been an honour to work with Frick, a one-of-a-kind coach. She alsowants people to know what a fun sport wheelchair basketball is.

"I think it's overlooked. It's very physical, fast, [and] it's a very tactical and technically proficient game.There's lots of strategy that goes into it.

"Once people have a bit of exposure to the sport, they really take to it because it's really fun to watch and play. It's just a good time."

With the 2024 Paralympic Games set to begin, many in her family are coming to Paris to support her, including her dad and stepmother, aunt and uncle and a few of their friends, with many others supporting her from home.

Team Canada's women's wheelchair basketball team is set to play their first game on Thursday, Aug. 29. People can see the TVschedule of the 2024 ParalympicGames here.

With files from All Points West and This is Vancouver Island