The Competitive Spirit Gets Hot

Extremity Games hosts seventh annual extreme adaptive sport competition.

  • O&P Business News, August 2012

NEW BRAUNFELS, Texas — With the heat already climbing into the 90s despite the early morning hour, bands of athletes could be seen stretching, jogging and readying equipment as they prepared for the day’s events. However, most of these competitors require an addition to their usual athletic gear — an extra prosthetic limb.

The athletes were gathered at the Texas Ski Ranch here for Extremity Games 7 (eX7), an adaptive extreme sports competition for athletes with limb loss or spinal cord injury. Now in its seventh year, Extremity Games was created to raise awareness about athletes with limb loss and to give athletes at every ability level an opportunity to compete against one another.

“Attending my first Extremity Games was an amazing experience. I got to meet other athletes like myself who were pushing their boundaries at such a high level,” Ronnie Dickson, an adaptive climber and the leader of the rock climbing competition, told O&P Business News. “It is really inspiring to be part of such a vibrant community, and I hope everyone who participates is able to take a similar meaningful experience away with them and realize that they only limits we have are the ones that we set for ourselves.”

Biking and skateboarding

The eX7 Main Event kicked off with the mountain bike race. The bikers, competing in either the transtibial, transfermoral or spinal cord injury groups, completed six laps on the race course, which included a series of tight turns, steep inclines and jumps. Andy May, the transtibial elite winner from last year and a territory manager from Cascade Orthopedic Supply, successfully maintained his title, securing a first place finish, followed by Greg LaKomski in second and Ruben Macias in third. The transfermoral elite defending champion, Stephen Buchler, also retained his title, with Peter O’Brien placing second. Jim Santangelo, competing in his first Extremity Games, inaugurated the spinal cord injury division and took home the first place title.

Trevor Bunch placed second in the novice rock climbing event.

Trevor Bunch placed second in the novice rock climbing event.

Images: Gilbride M. , O&P Business News

 

Following the bike race, spectators gathered at the other side of the ranch to watch the skateboarders. The boarders were allotted a 10-minute “jam session” to land their best tricks and impress the judges. Greg Shaw stole the show and secured his first place victory by landing a kick flip, big air transfer. Shaw, a paraplegic as a result of a congenital spinal disorder called sacral agenesis, is also a member of the US National Sled Hockey team, winning a gold medal at the 2010 Winter Paralympic Games in Vancouver. Justin Beauchesne, whose arms and part of his right foot were amputated in early childhood due to a bacterial infection, also impressed the crowd with his handstand kick-flip, propelling him to a second place finish. Oscar Loreto finished in third place.

For the first time, eX7 included a novice powerlifting competition. Kedgerick Smith, who is paralyzed from the waist down, placed first after bench pressing 350 pounds. Competing in the one-arm competition, Lucio Guerra completed a 160-pound one-arm dumbbell press to easily secure his first-place spot.

Kayaking and rock climbing

Out on the lake, the kayakers completed a series of heats to determine who would race in the final. In his second event of the day, Jeff Waldmuller, the men’s novice winner at eX6 last year, led the way for the men’s elite group. Trailing closely behind him were Jim Wazny in second and Mike Schulenberg in third. Representing the women’s elite group, Kelly Allen defended her title from last year, edging out Kimberly Olson, second, and Katelynn Porzell, third.

Trevor Wallace won gold in the novice wakeboarding event.

Trevor Wallace won gold in the novice wakeboarding event.

 

After the kayaking finale, everyone was happy to move inside the Texas Ski Ranch facility and cool off in the air conditioning as the rock climbers prepared to begin. Each competitor attempted three climbs, each getting progressively harder, and the winner determined by the best times. Pete O’Brien, a transfermoral amputee, impressed the crowd by removing his prosthetic leg and scaling the wall with remarkable speed. Andy May, who had already snagged one gold medal earlier in the day, notched a silver medal and Waldmuller, the defending champion from last year, placed third. Juan Latoree, Trevor Bunch and Seth Alexander all made their Extremity Games debuts placing first, second and third, respectively, in the novice division. Olson, the only female competitor in the event, received an honorable mention.

Wakeboarding

As the rock climbing competition came to a close, the crowd made their way back outside for the eX7 finale, wakeboarding. In this event, boasting the biggest athlete participation of the day, each boarder in both the elite and novice groups was given 10 minutes to display their best moves on the lake.

In the elite group, the top three boarders moved on to the final round where they were given one final run — two lengths of the lake — to land their best tricks. Although all of the boarders displayed impressive grabs, spins and flips, it was hard to compete with Extremity Games veterans and former winners Sean Reyngoudt and Billy Tonis, who dominated the wake. Logan Aldridge joined them in the top three.

Logan Aldridge placed third in the elite wakeboarding group.

Logan Aldridge placed third in the elite wakeboarding group.

 

Aldridge, who lost his left arm in a boating accident when he was 13 years old, was up first in the final round. During the first round, Aldridge landed an impressive series of jumps, back flips and heelside shiftys, where the boarder rotates his lower body mid-jump as he cuts across the wake, but he struggled with his control during the finals.

Following Aldridge, Tonis jumped into the lake for his final run. Tonis’s right arm was paralyzed as a result of a brachial plexus injury from a motorcycle accident; he tucked it under his shirt and held the bar with his left. Tonis commanded the wake, landing a series of 180·s and backrolls with ease.

However, Reyngoudt, the eX6 champion and a transtibial amputee, stole the show by landing a 360º rodeo, which is partially inverted 360º turn with a back flip, to secure a first place finish. Tonis and Aldridge followed in second and third, respectively.

Oscar Loreto showed off his skateboarding skills, placing third.

Oscar Loreto showed off his skateboarding skills, placing third.

 

The winners of the novice group were determined by their scores from the first round. Trevor Wallace, a transfemoral amputee who lost his leg from an infection, secured the gold medal, despite the fact that he was performing on a borrowed knee after he broke his during a trial run the day before. Jim Wazny, in his second event of the day, scored second, and newcomer Mike Rousselle, who lost his left arm and right leg in a workplace accident, brought home a bronze medal.

Motocross

The motocross portion of the competition was held separately at Baja Acres in Millington, Mich. on May 26. The event had two divisions: stand up, for amputees, and sit down, for paraplegics, quadriplegics and those with limb difference. Mike Schultz, a transfemoral amputee, placed first for the second consecutive year, followed by Wazny in second and Nick Mardis in third. The sit down winners were Darius Glover in first place, Jesse Gildea, second place and John Harris, third place.

Extremity Games hosted its largest athlete participation to date, more than doubling the participation rate from last year, along with the countless volunteers, families and spectators also in attendance. All of the winners in the elite group received cash prizes, and novice group winners received a variety of prizes including gift cards and athletic apparel and gear. — by Megan Gilbride

References:

Visit the O&P Business News Facebook page (www.facebook.com/oandpbusinessnews) for exclusive photos and videos from eX7.

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