Paralympic Games in Paris will stand out for veteran goalball captain Amy Burk | Canada News Media
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Paralympic Games in Paris will stand out for veteran goalball captain Amy Burk

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PARIS – Amy Burk doesn’t know if her fifth Paralympic Games will be her last, but she does know Paris will feel monumental to her.

Her sons Lucas, 10, and five-year-old Ryan have albinism and visual impairment as she does.

Burk hopes having her sons with her at South Paris Arena will help them fully understand why their mom works so hard at goalball and why it takes her away from them for long stretches of time.

“My kids have never seen me play internationally,” Burk said. “I went back to school. I’m a mom who plays high-performance sport. Goalball is something that I absolutely love to do. It’s been a huge part of my life.

“They’re a huge part of my life. I want them to see you don’t have to settle for one thing. You can do multiple things.”

Goalball, which was invented in 1946 to help rehabilitate veterans who lost their sight in the Second World War, is played by blind or visually impaired athletes.

Players wearing blackout masks throw a ball that contains bells past opponents and into a net to score points. Each team has six players, but no more than three are on the court.

“The game is so much faster now,” Burk said. “Women are now throwing the ball between 60 and 63 kilometres per hour. When I started, I would say if someone hit 50, that was considered incredible.”

The captain of the Canadian women’s goalball team has great expectations for the six-player squad, which opens Thursday against host France.

“This team is for sure capable to be on the podium,” Burk said.

The women’s goalball team captured back-to-back gold medals in 2000 and 2004, but has been held off the podium since then.

The 34-year-old Burk, from Charlottetown, lives in Ottawa with her husband Tyler and her two boys.

She earned her medical lab technician certification from Algonquin College last year. Burk started a new job in January with Newborn Screening Ontario.

Edmonton’s Brieann Baldock, Vancouver’s Maryam Salehizadeh, Whitney Bogart of Marathon, Ont., Meghan Mahon of Timmins, Ont., and Emma Reinke of St. Thomas, Ont., join Burk on the goalball team, coached by Trent Farebrother, that has kept the same lineup since Tokyo three years ago.

Canada didn’t make it out of the group stage in Tokyo, but finished fourth at the world championship in both 2022 and 2023. The team qualified for Paris by winning the gold medal at the 2023 Parapan American Games in Santiago, Chile.

Back spasms limited Burk’s court time in Tokyo, but even from the bench, she knew the team lacked chemistry.

“Team cohesion was a big thing,” she said. “It’s learning that it’s OK to actually communicate things with each other, whether it’s good or bad, you have to communicate it and work through those little things.

“It sounds so simple, but sometimes it can be intimidating and you don’t want to hurt feelings. It’s how do you go about it the proper way? It’s something we learned how to do with each other’s personality types.”

Silence during game action is desirable so players can listen and react to the sound of the bells in the ball, but Burk nevertheless expects a noisy arena Thursday when Canada, ranked sixth in the world, meets No. 18 France.

“It will be loud. You can guarantee it,” she said. “Our sport isn’t well-known so we don’t tend to have a lot of fans when we’re playing to begin with, but in Rio in 2016 we played in front of 10,000 people.

“Even in Santiago, it was loud when we played Chile. We’ve trained enough that we’ve learned to block certain things out.”

Burk is an ambassador for Unlock The Everyday, which is the umbrella of international health, development and disability organizations striving to improve people’s lives through assistive technology such as prosthetics, wheelchairs, eye glasses and hearing aids.

“You see what people can do with the technology. Guys running on a blade, to me that’s freaking cool, but there’s so many kids that don’t get access to that,” Burk explained.

“I’ve been a glasses user my whole life. I have albinism. Even cellphones, I’ll take a picture and zoom in so I can read it. You don’t realize how much we take that for granted.

“My two boys have albinism as well. Their school has been phenomenal since they started on making sure they have magnifiers, CCTVs, the iPad Pros to make things big so they can see. There are so many kids around the world that don’t have access to this.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 27, 2024.

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Langford, Heim lead Rangers to wild 13-8 win over Blue Jays

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ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Rookie Wyatt Langford homered, doubled twice and became the first Texas player this season to reach base five times, struggling Jonah Heim delivered a two-run single to break a sixth-inning tie and the Rangers beat the Toronto Blue Jays 13-8 on Tuesday night.

Leody Taveras also had a homer among his three hits for the Rangers.

Langford, who also walked twice, has 12 homers and 25 doubles this season. He is hitting .345 in September.

“I think it’s really important to finish on a strong note,” Langford said. “I’m just going to keep trying to do that.”

Heim was 1-for-34 in September before he lined a single to right field off Tommy Nance (0-2) to score Adolis García and Nathaniel Lowe, giving Texas a 9-7 lead. Heim went to the plate hitting .212 with 53 RBIs after being voted an All-Star starter last season with a career-best 95 RBIs. He added a double in the eighth ahead of Taveras’ homer during a three-run inning.

Texas had 13 hits and left 13 men on. It was the Rangers’ highest-scoring game since a 15-8 win at Oakland on May 7.

Matt Festa (5-1) pitched 1 1/3 scoreless innings to earn the win, giving him a 5-0 record in 13 appearances with the Rangers after being granted free agency by the New York Mets on July 7.

Nathan Eovaldi, a star of Texas’ 2023 run to the franchise’s first World Series championship, had his worst start of the year in what could have been his final home start with the Rangers. Eovaldi, who will be a free agent next season, allowed 11 hits (the most of his two seasons with Texas) and seven runs (tied for the most).

“I felt like early in the game they just had a few hits that found the holes, a few first-pitch base hits,” said Eovaldi, who is vested for a $20 million player option with Texas for 2025. “I think at the end of the day I just need to do a better job of executing my pitches.”

Eovaldi took a 7-3 lead into the fifth inning after the Rangers scored five unearned runs in the fourth. The Jays then scored four runs to knock out Eovaldi after 4 2/3 innings.

Six of the seven runs scored against Toronto starter Chris Bassitt in 3 2/3 innings were unearned. Bassitt had a throwing error during Texas’ two-run third inning.

“We didn’t help ourselves defensively, taking care of the ball to secure some outs,” Blue Jays manager John Schneider said.

The Blue Jays’ Vladimir Guerrero Jr. had a double and two singles, his most hits in a game since having four on Sept. 3. Guerrero is hitting .384 since the All-Star break.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Blue Jays: SS Bo Bichette (calf) was activated and played for the first time since July 19, going 2 for 5 with an RBI. … OF Daulton Varsho (shoulder) was placed on the 10-day injured list and will have rotator cuff surgery … INF Will Wagner (knee inflammation) was placed on the 60-day list.

UP NEXT

Rangers: LHP Chad Bradford (5-3, 3.97 ERA) will pitch Wednesday night’s game on extended five days’ rest after allowing career highs in hits (nine), runs (eight) and home runs (three) in 3 2/3 innings losing at Arizona on Sept. 14.

Blue Jays: RHP Bowden Francis (8-4, 3.50) has had two no-hitters get away in the ninth inning this season, including in his previous start against the New York Mets on Sept. 11. Francis is the first major-leaguer to have that happen since Rangers Hall of Famer Nolan Ryan in 1989.

AP MLB:

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Billie Jean King set to earn another honor with the Congressional Gold Medal

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Billie Jean King will become the first individual female athlete to be awarded the Congressional Gold Medal.

Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and Mikie Sherrill of New Jersey announced Tuesday that their bipartisan legislation had passed the House of Representatives and would be sent to President Joe Biden for his signature.

The bill to honor King, the tennis Hall of Famer and activist, had already passed unanimously in the Senate.

Sherrill, a Democrat, said in a statement that King’s “lifetime of advocacy and hard work changed the landscape for women and girls on the court, in the classroom, and the workplace.”

The bill was introduced last September on the 50th anniversary of King’s victory over Bobby Riggs in the “Battle of the Sexes,” still the most-watched tennis match of all-time. The medal, awarded by Congress for distinguished achievements and contributions to society, has previously been given to athletes including baseball players Jackie Robinson and Roberto Clemente, and golfers Jack Nicklaus, Byron Nelson and Arnold Palmer.

King had already been awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2009. Fitzpatrick, a Republican, says she has “broken barriers, led uncharted paths, and inspired countless people to stand proudly with courage and conviction in the fight for what is right.”

___

AP tennis:

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Account tweaks for young Instagram users ‘minimum’ expected by B.C., David Eby says

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SURREY, B.C. – Premier David Eby says new account control measures for young Instagram users introduced Tuesday by social media giant Meta are the “minimum” expected of tech companies to keep kids safe online.

The parent company of Instagram says users in Canada and elsewhere under 18 will have their accounts set to private by default starting Tuesday, restricting who can send messages, among other parental controls and settings.

Speaking at an unrelated event Tuesday, Eby says the province began talks with social media companies after threatening legislation that would put big tech companies on the hook for “significant potential damages” if they were found negligent in failing to keep kids safe from online predators.

Eby says the case of Carson Cleland, a 12-year-old from Prince George, B.C., who took his own life last year after being targeted by a predator on Snapchat, was “horrific and totally preventable.”

He says social media apps are “nothing special,” and should be held to the same child safety standards as anyone who operates a place that invites young people, whether it’s an amusement park, a playground or an online platform.

In a progress report released Tuesday about the province’s engagement with big tech companies including Google, Meta, TikTok, Spapchat and X, formerly known as Twitter, the provincial government says the companies are implementing changes, including a “trusted flagger” option to quickly remove intimate images.

— With files from The Associated Press

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 17, 2024

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