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Daredevil Canadian to celebrate gold with skydive

China Daily | Updated: 2022-03-09 10:03
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Tyler Turner of Canada in action during the Winter Paralympics men's para snowboard cross SB-LL1 big finals at Genting Snow Park in Zhangjiakou, Hebei province, on Monday. [Photo/REUTERS]

As he lined up for his gold-medal winning race at his debut Winter Paralympics in Beijing, Canadian snowboarder Tyler Turner pretended he was going for a skydive.

The 33-year-old lost both his legs below the knee following a parachuting accident in 2017 when he landed badly after a jump from 3,000 meters.

The skydiving instructor was in a coma for four days and almost died.

His meteoric rise through the ranks of para snowboarding since has been a brutal physical and emotional roller-coaster, Turner said.

"It's been a wild ride. The first couple of years were a really tough grind," he told AFP in Zhangjiakou, Hebei province.

Initially Turner was able to get back on a surfboard because it was low impact, then years later with a lot of rehabilitation he could finally hit the slopes again.

"Snowboarding is my favorite thing on earth," he said.

The coronavirus pandemic saw most of the 2020-21 para snowboarding season canceled, but Turner bagged a gold at last year's World Cup at Colere in Italy.

On Monday, Turner outclassed his opponents in the snowboarding cross LL1 category to claim gold.

He beat the defending Paralympic champion Mike Schultz of the USA, China's Wu Zhongwei, who claimed bronze, as well as Chris Vos of the Netherlands in a dramatic race with plenty of thrills and spills.

'Not pretty'

Since his accident, Turner has battled inner demons as well as an addiction to pain medication on his road to Paralympic glory.

"I like to tell people it's not pretty, it's not sexy-it looks like I lost my legs yesterday and woke up tomorrow on the top of the podium, but that's not how it goes," Turner said.

"You've got to keep your head down. There's going to be setbacks. You've just got to keep pushing forward-perpetual motion."

As well as para snowboarding, Turner competes in para surfing and lives on a sailboat off the west coast of British Columbia with his girlfriend Kayleen.

The thrill seeker has continued working as a skydiving instructor despite his accident.

In July 2020, Turner was the first bilateral amputee to become a wing-suit pilot.

Turner, who has hundreds of skydives under his belt, says he'll go home to Canada after the Games and jump out of a plane to celebrate his gold.

Finding his pre-skydiving zen mental zone helped Turner claim victory at the Paralympics.

"In the start gate, I pretended like I was going for a skydive. I checked my handles, I checked my pilot chute and I pretended I was jumping out of an aeroplane," he said.

AFP

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