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TRENDING UPWARDS – Jessica Frotten powers her way to a bronze medal finish in the 100-metre final at the 2015 Parapan Am Games in Toronto last month. Photo courtesy of MATTHEW MURNAGHAN/CANADIAN PARALYMPIC COMMITTEE
Photo by Photo Submitted
TRENDING UPWARDS – Jessica Frotten powers her way to a bronze medal finish in the 100-metre final at the 2015 Parapan Am Games in Toronto last month. Photo courtesy of MATTHEW MURNAGHAN/CANADIAN PARALYMPIC COMMITTEE
The inspirational story of wheelchair racer Jessica Frotten added another chapter this week.
The inspirational story of wheelchair racer Jessica Frotten added another chapter this week.
The 27-year-old Whitehorse native was named to the 35-person Canadian team that will compete at the 2015 International Paralympic Committee (IPC) World Championships in Doha, Qatar, next month.
The team includes many of the medallists from the recent Parapan Am Games in Toronto.
“It still hasn’t quite sunk in yet,” said Frotten of the news. “It’s a pretty big deal. I was training like I was going to make the team, but you never know. There’s no guarantees in life.
“(Worlds) was always my goal, even through the Parapan Ams, worlds was the big competition this year and the team I most wanted to make.”
It hasn’t yet been six years since Frotten was paralyzed from the waist down in a car crash near the Yukon capital.
Ever since that life-changing moment, Frotten has pushed forward, inspiring an entire territory in the process.
“I don’t really think about it a whole lot,” she said of the crash, which was followed by a lengthy court case.
“But if you had have asked me five years ago if I was going to be on the senior team competing for Canada? That me would have never ever thought that the me now would exist.
“I think the reason I have come so far is I have an incredible support system. My family and friends – the Yukon has been with me the whole way. Ever since day one, there’s been an outpouring of support for me and my family.
“It may just be me out on the track, but it’s all that support that’s gotten me there. It’s really hard to fall when you’ve got so many backing you.”
Frotten, who now lives in Regina, will compete in the 100-, 200-, 400- and 800-metre events.
Her aim at worlds is to break the one-minute barrier in the 400.
“That would just make my whole season,” she said.
Frotten’s coach with the Saskatoon Cyclones, Rick Reelie, isn’t counting his up-and-coming star out of Canada’s medal hopes.
“Our goal realistically is to make some finals,” he told the Star today.
“But once you’re in a final, anything can happen. Our main focus is to build upon what she achieved so far this year and last. ... (But) every meet that Jessica goes to, she keeps excelling, and she is excelling at a little bit higher rate than the average athlete would.”
Frotten’s mental fortitude and natural abilities have fuelled her rapid rise, Reelie said.
“If there’s an obstacle in front of her, she just looks past it,” he said. “She just seems to be the kind of girl that when she decides she wants to do something, that’s it.”
Frotten’s also athletically gifted, said Reelie. She seemed to learn the technical sport of wheelchair racing with ease.
“It is a very high-end, elite sport,” he said. “You can’t go very far if you don’t have some kind of talent. ... She just picked it up right away.”
The two continue to train together on weekends in Saskatoon, though Reelie said his hope is Frotten one day moves to the area so they can train more often.
For now, Frotten hopes her showing at the world championships will propel her further onto Canada’s Paralympic Games radar.
That event is set for Rio de Janeiro in Sept. 2016. The athletics team is expected to be named after nationals next year.
Meanwhile, the 2015 world championships will take place Oct. 21 to 31. Frotten said she and the team will head to neighbouring Dubai Oct. 12 to get accustomed to the heat.
The last IPC worlds were held in France two years ago.
There, Canada won 15 medals – including seven gold. Nineteen national records were also established.
Athletics Canada will be looking for even more in Qatar, said head coach Peter Eriksson.
“The team’s objectives are to put more athletes into finals, win more total medals and win more gold medals than at the last IPC worlds,” he said.
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Comments (1)
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ronald doucette on Sep 22, 2015 at 3:56 pm
Good Girl go all the way