Scott Kempf
RHI Indy Cruisers
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Scott R. Kempf
aru...@sbcglobal.net
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For most people in our sport, even people who can walk some, using a power wheelchair is the ONLY way they can play a sport. Many folks with cerebral palsy or arthritis - and even young people with muscular dystrophy may be able to walk some. To me, this does not make them "quasi-abs" but means they are people with disabilities who have some lower limb mobility but nearly all of them cannot use their upper limbs much.
Does this mean they have the same functional limitations as someone who cannot walk? No. Does this mean they should be prohibited from playing power soccer? That is a different question to me. For me, if folks can NOT play push chair sports, AND they have significant impairment, then I am fine with them playing power soccer.
Even among folks who use power wheelchairs full-time, I see a lot of variety in terms of hand mobility, trunk balance, spasticity, etc. I know that these can significantly impact people's ability to play at the highest levels of power soccer.
I don't know about the East and Midwest Regions - but here in the West, the only folks I see who are playing power soccer and can walk are people with cerebral palsy. To me, the spasticity in their upper limbs really impacts their playing. To me, this offsets any advantage they might or might not have from being able to walk sometimes.
Anyway, this is just my opinion - my 2 cents.
Corbett
#55 San Jose Steamrollers
Corbett Joan O'Toole
Mail2C...@yahoo.com
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www.4dwm.org <<<< WONDERFUL NEW SITE:
"A place to network for women with speech and physical disabilities"
-----Original Message-----
From: USPowe...@googlegroups.com [mailto:USPowe...@googlegroups.com]
On Behalf Of Emily
Sent: Tuesday, May 20, 2008 11:59 AM
To: US Power Soccer
Subject: [USPowerSoccer] Quasi-ABs
-----Original Message-----
From: USPowe...@googlegroups.com [mailto:USPowe...@googlegroups.com]
On Behalf Of Emily
Sent: Tuesday, May 20, 2008 1:07 PM
To: US Power Soccer
Personally, I think the sport should be for people with severe physical
disabilities who use need a power wheelchair to adequately function in the
community. In my opinion, if we allow more able-bodied people to play, the
more severe athletes will be sitting on the sidelines.
We need a specific classification system to draw a line. The international
organization is working on a system and I think we should look at that when
it is concocted. I know they are making good progress, but I am not sure
what it will entail.
>>> "Barb Peacock" <bspe...@cox.net> 5/21/2008 9:28 AM >>>
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Scott
Chad,
Wasn’t Power Soccer created for people in wheelchairs to have an opportunity to take part in a sport that normally wouldn’t be available to people with disabilities? Power Soccer should be reserved for those who cannot participate in other sports.
"Some of us who have already begun to break the silence of the night have found that the calling to speak is often a vocation of agony, but we must speak. We must speak with all the humility that is appropriate to our limited vision, but we must speak." - Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. -- April 4, 1967<BR