Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 17 Aug 2005, p. 26

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Sleep well...l.ive welt. Locally owneu & manufactured on site Pun»: UH V .In ”mm mattress 282 Marslond Drive. Unit B Waterloo 519.r472729 WNW vwoter1oomottressto "x'\ C. "Northgate Auto Bod iilliiiih' 't6tr Complete Collision and Refinishing Service f30 Albert Street Waterloo 88 cNrrt'- Elanlra GL Prr In) " am (my [In-n Viva-a! '139' 2005 Acct-1t GS 2mm Santa Fe GU FWD y. , n m 'ttkr Manda" anada ' um Ryan Condon of the take field Lions successfully catch. es the ball dunng the Gold, en Glove competmon dunng the OASA Ontario Mite B Charrponsheps on Saturday at Waterloo's Hillude Park. workout. Continued from page " "I learned a lesson in tying your shoes." laughed Robinson. "Obviously they werent tied tight enough." But it's just like most things that Robinson does in her life. She rather do things for herself before asking for anyone else's help. "I dont like it when peo- ple say 1 have a disability and I can't do this and I can't do that," said Robinson. Robinson looks to the example of Chantal Petti- clerc. the Canadian wheel track star she recently met at Canadian Track Champi- Robinson circles her calendar for london Games Flashing the leather an. "q “mums; m. onshjps in Regina, Petticlerc brought home the most medals of any athlete from Athens last summer. "A lot of people think it matters but it does not." said Robinson. "Everybody thinks that able-bodied people can do much better than dis- abled people, but they can't. We can do just as good as them." And Robinson is also starting to make a name for herself under the tutelage of her local coach. Russ Woloshyn. and trains out of the Waterloo Memorial Recreation Complex. And the dividends are already starting to pay off after collecting two golds and two silvers at the recent Canadian Championships despite unofficially being too young for the competition. In fact. she broke the Cana- dian record set by S. Atkins in the 400 metres at the Pan- lympics in Seoul, South Korea. in 1988 by almost a Now her sights are set on qualifying for her own Para- lympics. She's circled the 2012 Games in London. Eng- land, as her target. She did all that while still learning how to properly start from the blocks. and learn how to run with track spikes for the first time. "We're working on it still, but I tend to back up when the gun goes off," said Robinson. "When everything starts working I think I can go even faster." She's now waiting for her lath birthday when she will be old enough to qualify for the Worlds. And she can't wait because she feels so comfortable being around fellow disabled athletes. "Whenever I'm at meets like that it's good because I dont have someone pointing at you and going. 'Oh look she's limping.” she said. "I get asked over and over again why I'm limping. "I just like to prove people wrong." _- "They" don't gin {that CP (Cerebral Palsy) is." But she's helping people forget. So what does she think about being a rule model? “I 've never thought about it," said Robinson.

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