Latest news with #wheelchairbasketball


CTV News
30-05-2025
- Entertainment
- CTV News
‘Life moves forward': Docuseries centred on former Humboldt Bronco Ryan Straschnitzki premieres in Regina
The AMI docuseries "We Were Broncos" follows Ryan Straschnitzki, as he works to make Canada's national sledge hockey team before switching sports. (Source: AMI) Ryan Straschnitzki, one of the 13 survivors of the Humboldt Broncos bus crash, is the subject of a new docuseries that follows his attempt to make Canada's national sledge hockey team before switching sports. The series, We Were Broncos, had its premiere in Regina Wednesday night. Speaking with CTV News, Straschnitzki explained that he was initially hesitant to participate in the series. 'The more I thought about, the more I thought it could be good exposure for adaptive sports, my journey and kind of a thank you to let people know that from their support I was able to be in this position and continue to strive for the paralympics,' he explained. The six-part series documents the partially paralyzed hockey player's attempt to make the national sled hockey team and an unexpected turn. 'So, I got cut from the national sled hockey team and my entire life revolved around getting cut from sports teams, so I knew that the next step was continuing to move forward,' Staschnitzki explained. 'That's all I was ever taught. My dad taught me that and so my next path forward, my next open door was wheelchair basketball.' The series airs Monday nights on the AMI cable channel and streams on AMI Plus. 'One of the things that we've been able to do is work across Canada with production companies – reflecting content with people with disabilities,' Vice President of AMI, John Melville, explained. The series is the creation of Regina television producer Lucas Frison. 'I have a personal connection with the Humboldt crash because I was best friends with Mark Cross, the assistant coach who died in the crash,' Frison explained. 'So, its always something that's close to me, I've always been following Ryan's journey from afar.' Straschnitzki is pleased with how the television series turned out. 'It's a part of life. Its something that happened that I wish I could take back – but life moves forward,' he said. 'Try to live your best life and do it in memory of them and everyone we lost that day. So, it's a lot of mixed emotions but a lot of it is that push and that drive to move forward from them.' While Straschnitzki is now focused on wheelchair basketball, he hasn't given up on his love for hockey. He's considering a return one day as a sled hockey coach.


CTV News
28-05-2025
- Entertainment
- CTV News
Humboldt survivor on new documentary
'We were Broncos' follows 26-year-old Ryan Straschnitzki's journey as he works toward his goal of playing wheelchair basketball.

ABC News
27-05-2025
- Sport
- ABC News
Wheelchair basketballers bolster domestic competition to support Gliders' bid for Brisbane 2032 Paralympics
Three-time Paralympic medallist Shelley Matheson found herself feeling adrift after the Gliders missed out on Rio 2016 by a single qualifying spot. "I was honestly just devastated … I felt lost, really lost. I didn't know where to from there because the Paralympics my whole career had been a given," Matheson told ABC Sport. "[Going in to qualifications] I literally was thinking about 'what medal am I going to get?' Not 'are we going to go or not?'" Then, eight years later, the Gliders fell to Japan in the 2024 IWBF women's repechage in Osaka in what was their last hopes for qualification for the Paris Games. "That was a big wake up call," Matheson said. "It's really hard to go to the Paralympics." It was a far cry from where Australian women's wheelchair basketball was used to being on the world stage. Since their debut at the Games in 1992, the Australian women's national wheelchair basketball made themselves known as one of the teams to beat after claiming four Paralympic medals. Matheson was involved in three of those podiums, with two silver medals and one bronze. Yet, having to watch the Rio and Paris Games from home, Matheson knew that wheelchair basketball in Australia had a need for a stronger domestic competition. Without a better high-performance pathway, the Gilders were no guarantee to make the Brisbane 2032 Games. With no Victorian state team in the Women's National Wheelchair Basketball League (WNWBL), Matheson was forced to travel interstate to compete with the Sydney side last year. A couple of other Victorian Gliders played in the Brisbane side. "You do all your training on your own. You literally just fly in for games. So yeah, it's tough," Matheson said. "We just didn't think that was good enough, that there wasn't any program in Victoria. So, we've been working for probably the last 10 months just to make sure that something comes together in Vic." Matheson, along with teammate Leanne Del Toso, spearheaded the introduction of Victoria's first state team since 2019 in the domestic competition, the Wonders. Along with the Gold Coast Rollers and Adelaide Thunder, they will join the WNWBL this year, with the season kicking off this Friday, May 30. "For years we had the talent in Victoria but no team," said Matheson. "Now we've had over 30 women put their hand up, held our first-ever try-outs, and selected 16 for the squad." In Adelaide, Gliders squad member Lucinda Bueti was instrumental in forming the Thunder. "This is my full-time gig now — I coach, run programs, and train six days a week because I've seen how life-changing this sport can be," Bueti said. "Having a women's team in Adelaide for the first time means young girls finally have something to aim for — in their own state. It's about pride, visibility, and building a future right here at home."


CTV News
26-05-2025
- Sport
- CTV News
New TV series focuses on Humboldt Broncos bus crash survivor and his journey to the Paralympics
Ryan Straschnitski talks about his journey to competing in Paralympic wheelchair basketball and the new series exploring the story called 'We Were Broncos.'


CTV News
26-05-2025
- Sport
- CTV News
New TV series focuses on Humboldt Broncos bus crash survivor and his journey to the Paralympics
Ryan Straschnitski talks about his journey to competing in Paralympic wheelchair basketball and the new series exploring the story called 'We Were Broncos.'