Close-knit Bandits steal the show

January 12th, 2009

As posted at: www.journalgazette.net

Kelly Soderlund

The Journal Gazette

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Growing up, Shane McVoy played the big three in sports: football, basketball and baseball.

But when he was 17 years old, his dreams of running the bases, tackling an opponent and dunking a basketball disappeared. He was racing a friend on his motorcycle on a country road in Huntington County when the path came to a T.

McVoy didn’t see the road end, and he crashed, flying into a shed on somebody’s property. He suffered a spinal cord injury and is paralyzed from the middle of his chest down.

After his accident, McVoy, who now uses a wheelchair, went out to his basketball court and tried to shoot a ball. It was pretty hard, and McVoy’s realization that he was not the same athlete was a blow to his confidence.

But then, chance stepped in.

McVoy was at a medical supplies shop when the storekeeper’s son asked him whether he would be interested in meeting some local guys who were trying to get some pickup wheelchair basketball games together.

Flash forward 18 years.

On Sunday, a 39-year-old McVoy led the Fort Wayne Bandits to a victory at the Mid-American Wheelchair Basketball Conference Tournament. The event was held at the Turnstone Center for Children and Adults with Disabilities, 3220 N. Clinton St.

The team, which is undefeated this season, won the tournament for the second year in a row.

The 15-member Bandits team faced off against the Cleveland Cavs, Columbus Buckeye Wheelers, the Moraine Minutemen and Lafayette Spinners at Turnstone’s gymnasium.

The competitiveness, athleticism and bonding brought McVoy, who is not only a player but coordinates the team, back to where he now has more confidence and higher self-esteem.

“It just gave me the team sports thing back,” said McVoy, of Huntington.

The camaraderie of wheelchair basketball also helped Justin Hosler, 31, of Huntington, meet some guys who knew what he was going through.

Hosler has paralysis from the waist down, the result of a car accident 11 years ago when a car came over a hill in Huntington County and struck him head-on.

Before joining the Bandits, Hosler said he knew only three other wheelchair users. Now, he can talk to his teammates about different medical issues and other things on his mind.

The Bandits are mostly adult men with spinal cord injuries, but there is also a player with one leg and another with spina bifida, a birth defect in which the bones of the spine don’t form properly around the spinal cord.

The range of disabilities leads to varying skill levels, with some players having control over more muscles than others, enhancing balance and coordination, Hosler said.

Their victory Sunday is not the end for the Bandits. They’ll compete in more tournaments and eventually travel to Denver for the national tournament, where they placed third last year.

Sled hockey team preps as Frostbite Classic nears

January 8th, 2009

As posted at: www.news-sentinal.com

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Representatives of the Fort Wayne Fire Department and Police Department will skate with the Fort Wayne Sled Hockey Team at 6:45 p.m. Monday at McMillen Park Ice Arena.The sled hockey team is preparing to play in the Bob Chase Frostbite Classic invitational tournament Feb. 14 and 15 at McMillen. Admission for Monday’s event is $5.

Results from the 7th Annual Columbus Collision

January 8th, 2009

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Friday - December 12, 2008

Kentucky vs. Pittsburgh  54-22

Michigan vs. Ohio II  1-0

Texas vs.Indy 44-41

 

Saturday - December 13, 2008

Minnesota vs. Kentucky  38-50 

Indy vs. Ohio II  50-32

Kentucky vs. Blitz 50-29

Texas vs. Ohio II 55-26

Michigan vs. Indy  64-35

Ohio Blitz vs, Ohio II45-25

Indy vs. Pittsburgh 1-0

Kentucky vs. Texas  46-31

Sunday - December 14, 2008

Ohio II vs. Pittsburgh  60-32

Indy vs. Ohio Blitz  40-37

Michigan vs. Kentucky  48-51

  

FINAL STANDINGS

1. Kentucky 

2. Michigan

3. Minnesota

4. Pasadena Texas

5. Indy

6. Ohio Blitz

Ohio II

Pittsburgh

Christmas gift ramps up mobility

January 5th, 2009

As posted at: www.indy.com

December 26, 2008 by Gretchen Becker | Star staff

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Morgan, an Avon resident, was born with spina bifida, and the birth defect causes the backbone and spinal canal not to close before birth. She has no feeling below her waist, making her a paraplegic.

She gets around her house by “furniture surfing,” using the backs of couches and chairs to get around. But a year ago, she broke her ankle, which hasn’t healed properly, so she’s been confined to a wheelchair and had been using a rickety temporary ramp outside her house.

Brownsburg’s St. Malachy Knights of Columbus built a permanent wooden ramp in front of her house Dec. 13, complete with a red bow for the holidays.

“We couldn’t provide a Lexus, but we could give her a ramp,” said Jack Kline, referring to television commercials where cars are donned with red bows for gifts.

“These people, they want no thanks,” Morgan said. “It’s all about Jesus and helping others. I can’t thank them enough, and I don’t even know who to begin to thank. They made a big, big difference in my life.”

Morgan, 57, is one of the oldest living people with her severity of myelomeningocele spina bifida. Most people don’t live past age 30.

Most people never even attempt to walk.

“I was never told ‘You’ll never walk,’ ” Morgan said. “I pulled myself up naturally.”

She credits her ability to walk to her family who made her walk to school despite her disability.

“I didn’t know there was anything wrong with me,” Morgan said. “They never told me. The more I walked, the stronger it made my legs. To me it was normal.”

But she needs a wheelchair outside the home, and because of the broken ankle that has had trouble healing, she’s limited to only the wheelchair right now.

Morgan has had four surgeries on her ankle, and she couldn’t afford to purchase a permanent ramp.

Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana, where Morgan receives treatments, helped contact the K of C volunteers, Kline said. Funding for the project came from local racing teams, and Lowe’s gave materials for cost.

Because her ankle wasn’t healing, doctors fused broken bones and created what Morgan calls her “Frankenstein foot.” If this promotes healing, she hopes to get out of her wheelchair, at least inside her home.

“I hope to surf again in my house,” she said.

Referee Training Clinic

January 3rd, 2009

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Saturday, Jan 10, 2009 8:00a to 4:30p

Referee Training Clinic:Anyone wishing to become a certified referee for the USPSA and/or for local games through power soccer of Indy must attend a power soccer referee clinic. Chris Mulholand, USPSA upervisor of Officials and Trainer will be teaching this informative class. The day begins with continental breakfast and classroom training, lunch and then hands on game-training. Please wera appropriate clothing ans court shoes. All participants must register with Power Soccer of Indy. Please email Bedwards@ecommunity.com to reserve your spot or for more infomation. The class will be held at St. Elizabeth Seton Church, Carmel, Indiana.

NATIONAL CITY BANK TO DONATE HISTORIC DISPLAYS’ BULBS TO EASTER SEALS ARC FOR 55TH ANNIVERSARY FUNDRAISER

January 3rd, 2009

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FORT WAYNE – The tradition began in 1940 when Santa’s sleigh and reindeer first lit up the Wolf & Dessauer department store downtown.  Over the last five decades as downtown Fort Wayne has evolved, many changes have occurred for this display, including this years update of its light bulbs for economical and longevity purposes.  Today, National City Bank proudly displays the lighted fantasy that awes children and adults alike every year, on the north side of its building.  The lighted display has approximately 24,717 light bulbs which have been replaced with LED lights and the old bulbs have been donated to Easter Seals Arc for our 55th anniversary fundraiser.

The bulbs will be cleaned, prepared, and packaged as ornaments by individuals with developmental disabilities at the workshop located on the Easter Seals Arc campus.  “This is a wonderful opportunity for our clients to receive training and learn a new skill,” says Jud Chasey, Work Training Manager.  “After the bulbs are cleaned, a ring will be attached by soldering it to the bulb, decals added, and then packaged to sell.”

“We believe this is a great opportunity to share a part of the historic Santa display with the community as a keep-sake, and provide assistance to a local charity, as well as training for their clients,” says Mike Eikenberry, President of National City Bank in Fort Wayne.

The bulbs will be available for sale in the fall of 2009 at Anne’s Hallmark stores & Easter Seals Arc where holiday cards and prints are currently on sale at a reduced price.  Price for the bulbs has not been determined at this time.  Production is slated to begin in March 2009.  For more information, contact Darlene Amstutz at 260.456.4534 ext 264.

NWISCIG January Meeting

December 28th, 2008

NORTHWEST INDIANA SPINAL CORD INJURY GROUP

NWISCIG@GMAIL.COM.

January Meeting

We will be meeting again on Saturday, January 3rd at…

Gelsosomo’s Pizzeria

1pm-?

2605 Laporte Avenue

Valparaiso, IN 46383

map | driving directions

This month we will be eating free pizza supplied by the Northwest Indiana Spinal Cord Injury Group and discussing some goals that we might have for the upcoming year.

The December meeting was great, thanks to everyone who made it out. We’ll see you next week.

New hockey dimension

December 24th, 2008

Sleds give those with disabilities opportunity to get out on ice, too

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As posted at: www. journalgazette.net

as written by: Ben Smith

Bob Chase sees them at every Komets game, dreaming their dreams behind the glass. Wheelchair parked hub-to-hub with wheelchair. Wondering what it must be like to glide so effortlessly across the ice, to carry a puck on the tape of a stick, to go top-shelf with it into the net.

“I’m sure they’d be dying to try to see what the heck this is all about,” Chase says.

Now they can.

Now comes sled hockey, a version of the game foreign to this hockey city until last year, when a man named Randy Kwapis wondered where in blazes it was. He’d moved to town in 2006 from the Detroit area, where his 18-year-old son, Matthew, played in a local adult league and also on a youth team in Grand Rapids, Mich. Basically it was have sled, will travel for the Kwapises.

At least until they got to Fort Wayne.

“There was no sled hockey here,” Kwapis recalls. “So I instigated getting something going.”

And now he can see what his instigation has wrought, and it’s not two minutes in the penalty box. On a snow-flying Monday night, he stands behind the boards at one end of McMillen Ice Arena, and to his left are 15 brand-new hockey sleds, each adorned with a red bow and the name of the corporate sponsor who paid for it. And on the ice, before long, will be a whole bunch of players on those sleds, wearing Komets jerseys and Carroll High School jerseys and Buffalo Sabres jerseys, maneuvering around with two short sticks that have a hockey blade on one end and metal teeth on the other for digging into the ice and propelling themselves.

“What’s neat about sled hockey is there are no boundaries,” says Perry Ehresman of Fort Wayne Parks & Recreation. “It’s for disabled individuals, it’s for able-bodied individuals, anybody can do it. We’re still building it, still getting the information out to the community, but the interest has grown.”

Kwapis, who enlisted the help of McMillen Ice Arena, Fort Wayne Youth Hockey, Turnstone and the League for the Blind and Disabled to get things rolling, won’t argue with that.

“We’re still a fledgling team here, but it’s come a long way in a year,” he says. “Last year we did our demo on Dec. 4, and that was the first time (sled hockey) had been introduced in Fort Wayne. Since then we’ve created a team – you can see the kids out on the ice – and have somewhat regular scheduled practices. In another year, we’ll have consistent ice time and all those other things.”

Fledgling though it is, it’s still the first sled hockey team in Indiana, which is part of why Chase was at McMillen on Monday. In February the local team, the ice arena and Fort Wayne Parks & Recreation will play host to the Bob Chase Frostbite Sled Hockey Tournament, the first of its kind in the city. Plus they’ll be doing a demonstration at Memorial Coliseum.

“I was aware of it because I get a lot of hockey stuff, but I didn’t really know what it was, and I didn’t think it would be coming here,” Chase says. “I was thrilled to be a part of it. It’s another dimension for people who probably would like to see what the experience of hockey is but because of their disabilities never could.

“Now they’re gonna have a chance. It’s great.”

Lafeyette Spinners

December 24th, 2008

wcbball.jpg Lafeyette Spinners Wheelchair Basketball on Wednesday nights at Faith Community Center 5572 Mercy Way, Lafayette, IN 47905762/449-4600 

Turnstone Fundraiser

December 24th, 2008

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On Tuesday, December 30th, 2008 from 6-9pm Pine Ridge Racquet & Fitness Club (12124 Lima Rd. Fort Wayne, IN 46818) will host the first “Battle @ The Ridge”.

 

Local wheelchair tennis players James Ezell and Kevin Hughes will compete along with the Pro Staff.

 

There will also be prizes, giveaways, raffles, a Kids Zone and much more.

 

To be apart of all the fun tickets only $5/person with proceeds from the event being donated to Turnstone.

 

***The big raffle item is a New 42″ HDTV.