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New game but same determination

Thomas Venos is turning the worst moment of his life into the biggest opportunity of his athletic career.
Thomas Venos
Burnaby Tennis Club’s Thomas Venos has set his sights on competing at the 2020 Paralympics in Tokyo. Paralyzed from the waist down after a dirt bike accident two years ago, Venos has discovered wheelchair tennis and aims to see how far he can go with it.

Thomas Venos is turning the worst moment of his life into the biggest opportunity of his athletic career.
The 17-year-old, who trains at the Burnaby Tennis Club and the Performance Institute, has his sights set firmly on competing for Canada in wheelchair tennis at the 2020 Paralympic Games in Tokyo.
Two years ago, Venos didn’t even play tennis. He also didn’t need a wheelchair.
But everything changed when Venos crashed while riding his dirt bike at the family cabin in the Cariboo. He suffered a T12 spinal
cord injury and was paralyzed from the hips down. He’d never play his most beloved sport, soccer, again.
Venos didn’t despair.
Within a month, he was in the gym at the G.F. Strong rehabilitation hospital shooting hoops and learning how to dribble the basketball while maneuvering his chair.
“It was pretty fun,” said Venos, who lives in Anmore.
When a representative from B.C. Wheelchair Sports visited the facility to promote an upcoming tennis tournament, he invited Venos to play even though he’d never swung a racket in anger before.
On May 6, Venos reached the semi-finals of a major international competition in Alghero, Italy
against some of the top players from countries like the United States, Chile, Netherlands, Brazil, Great Britain and Turkey.
Suddenly Tokyo doesn’t seem so distant.
Venos said he’s always been athletically-inclined; in addition to playing goal in soccer, he also played baseball and even a year of varsity volleyball. So despite losing the use of his legs, he saw no reason for that to change.
In fact he couldn’t let it change, he said, because sports were his link to his former, active life.
Venos’ first tournament didn’t go so well. He was still mastering pushing his chair, and adding a racket to the mix made it more complicated.
“I was pretty much just sitting there,” said Venos, who’d practised only twice before taking to the court for his first competition. “People just hit the ball past me.”
But with encouragement from his family and coaches who recognized his potential, Venos stuck with it. He started working with the national wheelchair tennis team coach at the Burnaby Tennis Club and at the University of British Columbia.
He was connected with a coach at the Performance Institute in Burnaby to help him with the mechanics of pushing his wheelchair.
“I was definitely getting better,” said Venos, who started winning games, but not yet matches.
His breakthrough came last year at a major tournament in Indian Wells, California – Venos won his division without losing a single game.
That success became contagious. He kept on winning, and moving up the ranks to play tougher, more experienced competitors.
Venos’ success at the World Team Cup tournament in Italy, the second-highest competition after the Paralympics, has whet his appetite for more.
“I’ll have to put in lots of training,” said Venos, who’s been accepted into the tennis program at the University of Alabama but is waiting to hear if a scholarship will help ease the financial burden of heading south for school. “I have to keep improving.”
And dreaming.
“I always wanted to be a pro soccer player,” said Venos. “But now I can dream of getting to the Paralympics.”