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Canadian Brian McKeever wins Paralympic gold in 2018 Winter Games

Canadian Brian McKeever wins Paralympic gold in 2018 Winter Games

| @indiablooms | 13 Mar 2018, 12:52 pm

Toronto/South Korea, Mar 13 (IBNS): Brian McKeever, 38, from Canada, one of the older athletes on the World Cup circuit against men nearly 20 years his junior, won a gold at  the PyeongChang 2018 Paralympic Winter Games. on Sunday, alongside guides Graham Nishikawa and Russell Kennedy, in the men's 20-kilometre cross-country ski freestyle race, media reports said.

This is the 14th medal in his career, making McKeever Canada's most decorated Winter Paralympian.

The late Lana Spreeman had won 13 medals in para-alpine skiing between 1980 and 1994.

Twenty years after learning he was losing his eyesight, the Canmore, Alberta based McKeever never lost a step.

"The last lap was very hard," McKeever was reported to state. "I was hurting at the end."  

On the final stretch, someone yelled "Brian, you're a minute ahead." And indeed he was.

McKeever's gold medal in the men's visually impaired 20km cross-country skiing event gave him 14 career Paralympic medals, the most in Canadian history.

His Paralympic resume now includes 11 gold, two silver and one bronze, with more chances for medals to come in Pyeongchang, South Korea.

"These guys did a great job of towing me today," McKeever was reported to say after the race. "They took care of me the whole way."

When McKeever was18 he wept on earing that he had Stargardt disease, which was already wrecking his central vision.

He was reported to say that he could see the doughnut but not the hole.

Already an accomplished skier at the time, McKeever  picked up his spirits and found a new path by switching over to the Canadian Paralympic program.

At age 30, his coach decided to leave him on the sidelines for the men's 50-km race at the 2010 Vancouver Games, B.C.

McKeever felt his dream of racing at both the Olympics and Paralympics shattered.

Although dejected, he picked up courage to win three Paralympic gold medals on the Whistler course.

Four years later, he found himself into the men's visually impaired one-kilometre race in Sochi with two Russians and one Swede. McKeever was able to win gold medal there also.

"I always wanted to be part of it,"  he told CBC Sports before arriving in Pyeongchang. "Having an older brother [Robin] who went to the Olympics in 1998 in Nagano was just another step along the way. Little brother always wants to be like big brother.

"I followed a career path similar to his and then I lost my eyesight.… I realized I could have a career in this sport anyways. That's all I ever wanted to do. I wanted to be a skier."

CBC Sports tweeted, 'Relentless. History maker. Brian McKeever, 14-time Paralympic medallist ... and big Shawshank Redemption.'

As  McKeever grew older his vision got worse and he was reportedly told this could be his final Paralympic Games.

But McKeever's golden performance Sunday, according to reports, leads one to believe that he would be back for the 2022 Winter Games in Beijing, China.

"I don't know about that," said Nishikawa, 34. "We still have a really busy week ahead of us. But with Brian, nothing would surprise me. It's amazing to be around someone so great at something. Every year, he brings something more. He's just relentless.

"I'm in awe even just hanging out with the guy."


(Reporting by Asha Bajaj)


Image:  Brian McKeever/Facebook Page

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