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McKeever gambles, wins third Paralympic gold

Visually impaired Nordic skier double-poles way to sprint title

Brian McKeever's decision to ski the entire one-kilometre Paralympic men's visually impaired sprint race without kick wax on Sunday (March 21) at Whistler Paralympic Park was part of the plan.

Dropping his guide and brother, Robin McKeever, less than halfway through the race was not.

It all worked out well, though, for the three-time Paralympian, who captured his third gold medal of the 2010 Games, the seventh of his career, by beating out second-place Nikolay Polukhin by 4.1 seconds. Zebastien Modin of Sweden who, at just 15, was the Games' youngest competitor took the bronze.

McKeever, the Canmore, Alta., athlete who has just 10 per cent vision because of Stargardt's disease, said the decision to go without kick wax and use skating skis in the classic-technique race which meant he had to double-pole the entire race was made based on both the conditions and the nature of the course.

"It was definitely harder on the uphill sections, but it was fast on the downhills and I think you saw that on the final pitch," McKeever said.

McKeever said he had tried the no-kick-wax strategy successfully at last year's International Paralympic Committee World Cup event here last year, and that others have used it with success when the conditions are wet but hard, as they were Sunday.

"We played our cards right today," he said. "We tried to qualify fast, then conserve energy in the semifinals and go without kick wax on the skis in the final. It's always a bit of a gamble but it paid off for us today."

Because of the disability staggering system used in the Paralympics, the McKeevers started the race 29 seconds behind Modin and 25 seconds behind Polukhin and Frank Hofle of Germany.

The McKeevers made up the stagger on a downhill section about halfway through the race, but by then he had become separated from his brother and was on his own when Polukhin went down going around a corner.

Brian McKeever said given his impairment, he was fortunate to steer clear of the other skier.

"That was a scary moment," he said. "I just made a good call and got by him, fortunately.

"That (getting separated) wasn't really planned. We just kind of got separated in the tracks there with me out front. Robin just tried to keep skiing and stay out of the other skiers' way."

By the finish line, Robin McKeever was just five metres behind his brother.

McKeever, 30, actually made Canada's Olympic Nordic skiing team but Canadian coaches passed him over for four other skiers when choosing their competitors in his best event, the men's 50-kilometre classic race.

Earlier last week, he said he "definitely" wants to go for both the Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2014, which would make him the first winter sports athlete to complete in both in the same year.

Robin McKeever, incidentally, will be 40 in 2014.

Visually impaired German skier Verena Bentele captured her 15th Paralympic medal, including 12 gold, by winning Sunday's women's race. Japan's Toshihiro Nitta won his second gold of the Games by edging Russia's Kirill Mikhaylov in the men's standing race.

Robbi Weldon of Thunder Bay, Ont., reached the semifinals of the women's visually impaired sprint and finished fifth. Mark Arendz from Springton, P.E.I., finished ninth in the men's standing event, narrowly failing to qualify for the semifinals. Jody Barber of Smithers placed ninth in the women's standing event.

Whistlerite Tyler Mosher, who placed 23rd in the men's classic 10K, finished 21st in the sprint.

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