Archive for September, 2008

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More sexy wheelchairs

September 19, 2008

Here’s another article I liked from UniversalSports.com.  It’s another one by Steve Goldberg: “The Evolution of the Paralympics Wheelchair.”

 

BEIJING — A prosthetic leg that will allow a man to run 100 meters under 11 seconds, a wheelchair that is so light and responsive that a basketball player can weave and turn through defenders with speed yet remain durable in a physical game or a racing chair in which a marathoner will complete more than 26 miles in less than 90 minutes.

When all is said and done, it is still the human machine that makes the difference but the advances in technology that have allowed the Paralympic athlete to perform at his or her best are nothing short of amazing.

It’s no different than the Olympic Games where advances in technology and materials have led to greater achievements by athletes from cyclists and pole vaulters to sailors, archers, skiers and bobsledders.

The situation of bilateral amputee Oscar Pistorius in his bid to compete for the South African Olympic team made global news over the past year as the technology and comparison of his carbon fiber running legs were debated by the IAAF and later the Court of Arbitration for Sport. Pistorius won the 100-meter sprint gold medal on Tuesday night at the Olympic Stadium Bird’s Nest. In the odd coincidence that one could only find in a Paralympic Games, American Brian Frasure, who won the bronze medal, is also the prosthetist who helped build Pistorius’s first running legs five years ago. Also lining up in the race was former Paralympic champion and world record holder Marlon Shirley who was instrumental in the design of the carbon fiber “Cheetah” foot made by Ossur that has helped Pistorius maximize his own abilities.

“The goal,” says Frasure, “is to get as close as possible to what they lost.”

With less fanfare, the development of sport specific wheelchairs has been critical to the increased performance of the athletes here in Beijing for the Paralympic Games.

“I think that it’s athlete driven, the move to more sophisticated technology,” says Phil Craven, the former Great Britain international wheelchair basketball player who is now the president of the International Paralympic Committee.

“When I started wheelchair basketball, there were regulations that everybody had to have the same chair. So, if you were 6’6” or 5’10” you had the same chair.”

Another regulation that today’s athlete would find abhorrent, was that all chairs had to have handles on the back, a concession to the dominant manufacturers of the time that were more interested in their needs than that of the athlete.

“I was the fastest man in the world in 1976,” laughs former Paralympic athlete and coach David Kiley, a man known more for his achievements on the basketball court than on the track. What amuses him is that he gained that title with a 100-meter wheelchair sprint of 19 seconds in the Toronto Paralympic Games. That wouldn’t even get him into the field now when the world record, set by Finland’s Leo-Pekka Thati in 2006, is 13.88.

He recalls that technology had just taken a great leap forward. “It was a standard manufacturer’s chair, mostly heavy steel folding chairs made by Everest & Jennings or Stainless Medical Products that you cut and chopped into a race chair.

“That’s all there was,” he says referring to the folding chairs. “They were lighter than typical hospital chairs but still very heavy.”

He says that the improvements at the time on the four wheelchairs included getting the knees up higher and a smaller push ring.

“Racing chairs began to develop by athletes building their own. We were all just playing around, trying to make these things go faster. We were cutting down backs and taking off the brakes.”

The modified chairs were scarce and Kiley recalls that in relays, it was not uncommon to share chairs, using two chairs for four racers.

Kiley is a Michael Jordan of sorts as he was the first wheelchair basketball player to have his name on a specific sport specific wheelchair, the Quickie All Court, which has become the chair of choice for many top players around the world such as Canada’s Patrick Anderson and the USA’s Jeff Glasbrenner.

“It gives me the ability to be the best that I can be,” says Glasbrenner. “The chair is an extension of my body and without that, I wouldn’t be able to do the things that I can do.” 

A single leg amputee, Glasbrenner will be relying on prosthetic technology when he competes in the Iron Man Triathlon World Championships a few weeks after the games.

About 30 years ago while athletes like Henk Mackenzie, a basketball player from Holland were experimenting with odd notions like camber in Europe and Bud Rumple was building rigid box frames for his Detroit Sparks basketball players, Kiley was part of a parallel group he calls “a speed bunch” in California including Rod Williams and Garry Kerr, multi-sport athletes like himself who knew there was a better way. He says Williams, the first to use a smaller push ring on a racing chair, also devised “a little block that would create camber,” which, without question, has been one of the most significant developments in sports chairs.

“All of a sudden, you were turning like crazy.”

Craven remembers his first chair with camber in 1979. “It was an amazing opening up of the possibilities.”

Another Californian who would make a significant impact on the future of sports wheelchairs was Marilyn Hamilton, the founder of Motion Designs now know as Quickie, which was bought by Sunrise Medical in 1986 and joined in 1992 by the German based innovator Sopur, founded by former Paralympic track and handcycle racer Errol Marklein.

Twice a U.S. Open tennis champion as well as a Paralympic silver medalist in the 1984 Winter Games, Hamilton wasn’t happy with the performance of the equipment available, either in her personal life or on the court.

Hamilton, whose tennis chair is now a part of the Smithsonian Museum collection in Washington, D.C., was also the first person who realized that wheelchairs didn’t have to be the same color. It’s an innovation that while not necessarily technical, has been compared to the evolution from black and white television to color and is now everywhere.

Before Hamilton, the first athlete to take their own innovations to a broader market as a business was Jeff Minnebraker in the early 1980’s. It was Minnebraker who influenced others such as Brad Parks, who is credited with being the primary force behind the growth of wheelchair tennis. Minnebraker’s company, Quadra, the first real sports wheelchair manufacturer, made custom-built anodized and welded frames. He is also credited with developing the quick-release axel which is now standard.

As an athlete, Hamilton recognized that innovation in sports chairs was an opportunity as much as a need and pushed the research and development of better equipment for tennis, basketball and track. “You have to be responsive to the needs of the athlete. We don’t tell them what they need; they tell us and then we work with them with our engineers to continually improve the product.”

As the responsibility for modifying and improving the function and performance of a chair has moved away from the athlete, though that is still where much of the necessary information on how improvements can be made comes from, the performances have improved exponentially.

Along with Quickie and Sopur, both part of Sunrise Medical, other companies including Otto Bock, Invacare, Meyer and RGK are producing sport specific wheelchairs as the demand increases, not just for elite athletes but for recreational athletes around the world.

Previously left to their own designs, there is now a school of science with experts and engineers from many disciplines working with athletes to continually improve the equipment.

Tim Raiskup, who had worked on Indy racing cars for Penske Racing drivers such as Emerson Fittipaldi, Rick Mears and Danny Sullivan, has been an engineer for Quickie going on ten years.

As racing chairs developed into the three wheel chariots that we see today, the chairs used for basketball and tennis were still pretty much the same. A couple of years after the 1996 Atlanta Paralympic Games, Raiskup says that a mandate came down to create a specific basketball chair.

“We developed that chair with Dave Kiley’s help and a focus group of basketball players he brought in. We were probably one of the first specific chairs that was created for the sport of basketball. It became the All Court.”

When we first started this, the basketball players were just a straightforward push from one end to the other, bang into each other type of arrangement. Now, these guys are bouncing up on one wheel to get higher, they are falling over with the chair on top of them and getting back up with a simple push up. Trying to meet those needs and create something that survives these guys’ activities now is very different. It has to be light and responsive and very durable.

He says that one of the biggest recent innovations has been the addition of the integral anti-tip bars. It was begun in tennis but when it was applied to basketball, he says that, “it allowed these guys to play more aggressively. It allows the chair to be more of a mid-wheel than rear wheel, making it more responsive. Before to turn quickly on a dime, a player would have to physically ‘wheelie’ (pull back onto just the rear wheels) and transfer their weight.

As materials go, the chairs have evolved from steel to aluminum to titanium, which had previously been very expensive and time consuming to work with.

“The ability to get it and fabricate it in an economical fashion has been a recent change. It has allowed us to do what we need to meet the athletes’ needs with far less time required. The development of this in our everyday chairs has allowed us to bring it into the sports market.”

Former Paralympic champion Monique Kalkman, the first in the great line of female Dutch tennis stars that is now led by world number one Esther Vergeer, says that the adjustability of chairs like the Quickie Match Point have given the players the chance to combine greater seating height, which can add significant velocity to serves with the agile mobility prerequisite to moving about the court. Lighter in weight and extremely responsive, it allows wheelchair players more time to prepare their shots.

“If you can’t get there, you can’t hit it,” she says.

“In tennis it is important to be quick in your first push and in your turns,” adds Vergeer. “With my Match Point, it doesn’t take you much to do that. You don’t lose energy, power or strength pushing your chair so the pushing is very efficient.”

Efficiency is also the hallmark of racing chairs where the evolution from boxy four wheelers to long and sleek aerodynamic, graphite wheeled rockets has created a reverse paradigm where it is the Paralympic athlete that excels in longer distances.

Switzerland’s Heinz Frei, the winner of 96 marathons, hold’s the world’s best official marathon time of 1:20:14, set in 1999 in Oita, Japan. By comparison, Kenyan Paul Tergat’s world record of 2:04:55 set last September for an able-bodied runner is more than 44 minutes slower.

While durability is important, such as in the rough and tumble physicality of the men’s 1,500-meter semifinal races run here in Athens, the need for speed is the most critical element.

That’s why an elite athlete such as now retired Tanni Grey Thompson of Great Britain thought it was such a wonderful first gift her husband Ian gave her on their first date, a Sopur carbon fiber front wheel. Her friends were appalled. She loved it. “For a wheelchair racer it was a pretty sexy thing actually.”

The track and road racing chairs and to an even greater extent, handcycling chairs share the same kind of technology that is found in bikes ridden in the Tour de France.

Where will it go from here? The change has been coming so rapidly that the technology has possibly caught up to and perhaps exceeded the athlete. But as Olympic and Paralympic history shows, that won’t last for long and more innovation will come down the line with each new step giving greater edge to the human machine.

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Yay for U.S. quad rugby!

September 19, 2008

Have you all been following the Paralympics?  It’s not too late to go to UniversalSports.com and catch up on what you’ve missed.  You can see the entire quad rugby gold medal match, U.S. vs. Australia.

 

There’s some interesting articles, too.  Here’s one I liked by Steve Goldberg, “From the Games: the Making of a Paralympian.”

 

“Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them.”  –William Shakespeare Twelfth Night, Act II, Scene V

BEIJING — Every competitor here in Beijing has a compelling story about how they got here. For most of the athletes, the Paralympic Games or the world championships in their sport have been their first experience on the global stage. Some of them have been athletes most of their lives while others came to Paralympic sport only after an accident or illness changed their physical circumstances.

Such is the case for three athletes, an American, a Canadian and a Spaniard, who came to the Paralympics after making their mark elsewhere.

The American

Dave Denniston was a 1999 NCAA team and individual champion while swimming for Auburn University. He set American records in the 50 and 100 meter breaststroke in 2000 and swam for the USA in the 2003 World Short Course Championships setting a world record as part of the 400 meter medley relay team with teammates Aaron Peirsol, Peter Marshall and Jason Lezak. Peirsol and Lezak swam in the Olympic Games here last month.

“Watching them swim was exhilarating to say the least.”

Denniston says he hadn’t determined if he was going to try for the U.S. team in 2008 after falling just short of making it to Sydney or Athens. He placed fourth in the 100 meter breaststroke and sixth in the 200 meter breaststroke at the 2004 trials.

After his accident though, getting to China for the Paralympics absolutely became a goal.

A few months later, in early February 2005, Denniston was sledding with a friend in a remote region of the Snowy Range back in his home state of Wyoming. It seemed like a harmless decision at the time when he made the choice to go down the hill head first. Despite his strength and coordination, Denniston lost control of the sled which slammed into a tree. He remained conscious the entire time but realized something was wrong when he couldn’t feel his legs.



Because of the backwoods area they were in, it took more than two hours for help to arrive. He was first taken to a hospital in Laramie, then to spinal cord specialists at Poudre Valley Hospital in Fort Collins, Colorado where he learned that he was completely paralyzed from the T-10 vertebrae down.

At the insistence of Jimmy Flowers, a former coach from Auburn, Denniston set his sights on Beijing and the Water Cube where his friends competed. “He encouraged me into looking to do the Paralympics for real in August of 2007.”

Honored by his teammates who elected him captain, Denniston says he was only vaguely familiar with the games. “I hate to admit it, but I was one of the people who confused the Special Olympics and the Paralympics and didn’t realize they were separate.”

“Now that I’m involved with it, it’s amazing how quick people seem to be responding to the Paralympics and getting to recognize many of these athletes.

Going into Monday’s 4-by-50-meter relay, he had finished ninth in two other events, not making it to the evening finals. But he recognizes that his past victories don’t mean immediate success in the Paralympic pool. He says he’s encouraged by the fact that his times keep improving.

“I basically had to learn to swim all over again the past year. It’s still the water, it’s still the pool. It looks like swimming but it feels completely different. There’s a lot of ways that I’m learning to make my body go through the water without the use of my legs.”

“At this meet, I’ve dropped two to three seconds in every event that I’ve swam.”

“I’m definitely looking to continue swimming until I feel like I’m not getting faster anymore. If I can keep doing that for four more years, then heck yeah, I’ll go to London. I’d love to go to London.”

The Canadian
At the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games, Misty Thomas marched in the opening ceremony as a member of the Canadian women’s basketball team.

“It was a childhood dream coming true, a fantastic dream,” said Thomas.
 
The Canadians would finish fourth, losing the bronze medal to China 57-62.

At 20, she was an Olympian. Two decades and four years later, she is in China, marching into the Bird’s Nest Stadium in Beijing as a member of another Canadian national team, the women’s wheelchair basketball squad.

Though admitting that it was anything but redemption, Thomas would have her revenge, beating hosts China in placement game 53-46 after the Australians had knocked favored Canada out of medal contention the day before.

To wear the Canadian uniform again, this time in the Paralympic Games, to a full and cheering stadium made her just as proud as she was in Los Angeles. She’s been averaging 13 points and 10 rebounds a game.

Born in Los Angeles to an American mother and Canadian father, Thomas grew up in Windsor, Ontario since she was five and came up through the Canadian basketball system. She made a number of national teams before playing college ball at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas where her No. 4 jersey has been retired. In 1998, at 34, the former point guard became the youngest individual inducted into the Canadian Basketball Hall of Fame.

Thomas only uses a wheelchair to play basketball. Though she can stand and walk, nine surgeries, including three reconstructive on both knees, have left her unable to play the stand-up game. In her work managing high performance sports programs for the Sports Medicine Council in British Columbia, she was more than familiar with Paralympic sports.

“I interact with all the athletes living in BC, both Olympic and Paralympic, so I had known the wheelchair basketball crew for years.”

The players had asked her repeatedly to come out and join them but it took a while before her schedule let it happen three years ago. The basketball part she understood, but the chair was daunting.

“It was fun to have this challenge of figuring out this really important piece of equipment alongside this game that I loved but had not been able to play for so long.”

When asked how long it took for her to get comfortable with the chair, she laughs and says her team is still working     on that. She says that being ambulatory and not having to use a chair every day like many of her teammates and opponents is a disadvantage on the court.

“People will say: ‘How is it fair that you as a player that can stand up gets to play in a wheelchair? How is that fair?’ and I tell them, ‘You’re totally right, it’s unfair to those of us who are ambulatory because they are so skilled in the chair.”

“It’s such a steep learning curve. Put Kobe Bryant in a chair and a junior girl would be able to stop him from scoring.”

“I still have a lot to get better at. The chair really is a part of them and I’m no where near that.”

The Spaniard
For Javier Ochoa, the highpoint of his professional cycling career was both metaphoric and literal. In 2000, the Spaniard beat Lance Armstrong and the rest of the field the peak of the Hautacam, nearly 5,000 feet above sea level in the Pyrenees, to win a stage of the Tour de France and finish 13th overall.

Seven months later, while on a training ride along an expressway near the southern town of Cartama in the province of Malaga with his twin brother Ricardo, the pair were hit by a car. The accident killed his brother and left Javier seriously hurt with head and chest injuries as well as a broken tibia and fibula. In a coma on a respirator for nine weeks, his weight dropped to 108 pounds.

Returning home after five months in the hospital, his world was dramatically different.  The accident and the coma left him unable to talk properly or solve simple arithmetic problems. He couldn’t walk without assistance but in October 2001, he told Spanish journalists that he hoped to be riding again within a year. He started to train, first on an Ergometer, then on rollers. In November 2002, 21 months after the accident, he got back on a bike for the first time.

At the end of July in 2003 he told the media that, “I would like to be Paralympic champion in Athens. I am going away to prepare for it. I do not know the level at which my rivals will be, with whom I am going to compete. I think that it will not be easy, but I will at least try to give the best possible level.”

In September 2003, he won seven medals, three gold, three silver, one bronze, in the Paralympic Open European Cycling Championships.

“One of the major differences is that we are not able to train as long and hard as other athletes. Six hours of training is quite arduous for us. We can only train two to three hours at a time.

In Athens, racing in the Cerebral Palsy 3 class, he won a gold in the road race/time trial event and a silver on the track in the individual pursuit. He defended the time trial gold last week racing around the Ming Tombs Reservoir in Beijing’s Changping district.

“To tell you the truth, I had no idea whatsoever about the time. It was after I crossed the finish line, maybe two to five minutes later that I realized I had won.”

In the road race two days later, Ochoa won silver, finishing second to Great Britain’s Darren Kenny by just two seconds.

He had been disqualified in the pursuit this year for following Kenny too closely.

“I faced a lot of difficulties, especially with all the rehabilitation I received. Of course, there are differences in terms of being a professional athlete but what I love to do more than anything is to participate in my sport and be part of the competition.”

And the chance to win again. 

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Teen English

September 9, 2008

Dragon NaturallySpeaking version 10 is out!  I ordered it, and it should arrive any day now.  Generally speaking, I’m a late adopter.  This is pretty much the only piece of software that I update religiously.  It just has such a big impact on my quality of life.  Ditto with new headsets.  I’m dying to get Bluetooth, but so far their sound quality is not supposed to be as good as the old wired headsets.  Someday… someday I’ll be wireless, able to run free while using my voice recognition software!

 

I hear there are some new features, but I don’t actually know what they are yet.  I have noticed that there are more and more English versions.  There’s Australian English, South Asian English, and something I’ve never seen before: Teen English.

 

What can they mean by that?  I use my fair share of “like” and “you know,” would I be better off with Teen English?

 

 

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Obama and my wheelchair

September 2, 2008

Got my first wheelchair a little while ago.  I ordered it off a great website: http://www.spinlife.com

Free delivery!  Fast, too.  It arrived within 48 hours of my pressing “buy.”

Originally, I was, how you say… ambivalent about having to buy a chair.  It’s really not the most joyful Internet purchase for a girl to make.  It’s no Zappos.com.  But I started looking around on the site, and I really got into it.  There are some hot wheelchairs on the market these days: ultralightweight titanium chairs, badass quad rugby chairs, chairs you play basketball in, reclining chairs, different colors…. 

I ended up going really basic.  I got the Invacare Tracer EX2, a 40 pound standard wheelchair that folds and fits in the trunk of my Honda Civic.  It’s the transport wheelchair of choice at most airports and hospitals, and I love it!  Easily the best $150 I’ve ever spent.

I’ve been using it for outings.  This may sound petty, but I haven’t been able to hang out at the mall in more than a year.  So my husband and I took the chair and went shopping.  And it was so nice to be out and about.  Normally when I run errands, it’s basically a race against time.  I have 10 to 15 minutes of standing time before the pain starts.  It was just great to be out without having that stopwatch ticking, you know?

And that’s the interesting thing about wheelchairs.  The idea of getting one scared and depressed me.  It was such a symbol of what was going wrong with my health.  But the whole point of a wheelchair is access, equal access.  You don’t have to be stuck in the house, you can be out there with people whose legs work just fine.

Which brings me to the Obama campaign connection.  My wheelchair arrived in a giant cardboard box emblazoned with the Invacare logo and their motto, “Yes, you can.”