Good Signing: NHL – Hockey have confirmed the £15k si…
Riding school for disabled students raises £15k
A riding school for disabled students has raised £15,000 needed to replace its outdoor arena.
Work is underway at the Pembroke Centre, near Salisbury, Wiltshire, where the Wilton Riding for the Disabled Association operates.
The group needed the funds to complete work on the arena surface, which rider Victoria Cheshire said has been “falling to pieces”.
Trustee Jackie Worrall said the old arena had become stony and unsafe, which is bad for the ponies’ feet and also for riders.
Wilton RDA has been providing therapeutic riding for children and adults for more than 40 years, offering riders the chance to develop their balance and co-ordination, gain muscle strength and build up their all-important core muscles.
Ms Cheshire has cerebral palsy, epilepsy and learning difficulties and has been riding with Wilton RDA for many years, but started out on horseback when she was just a toddler.
Her parents were told by a medial professional it would help strengthen her muscles.
Now 39-years-old, she said the benefits go far beyond that.
“It helps me when I go riding to forget about my health. It helps my mental health. It’s almost therapy and it’s good fun,” she said.
“I love it. I wouldn’t stop unless somebody medically told me I had to stop.”
Sport England conditionally promised £7,500 in match funding, leaving charity bosses to raise the same amount to ensure that the group received the additional money – which it has now done.
A crowdfunding page set up for the group now has a “stretch” target of £20,000, with all the proceeds going toward the new outdoor school.
While there is an indoor arena, both Ms Cheshire and Ms Worrall said riding in the fresh air is important.
“We want them to have the best we can offer them in terms of the facilities” said Ms Worrall.
“It’s also about having a relationship with the horses and ponies, which is therapeutic in itself.
“You can see from the smile on people’s faced how much they’re enjoying it. They get the opportunity to talk and to share experiences.”
The group is dependent on donations and local support and it is the first time the group have crowdfunded.
“We’re hugely grateful to all the people who have already given us a donation,” Ms Worrall said.\
The hockey world continues to mourn the tragic loss of Johnny and Matthew Gaudreau and the Toronto Maple Leafs are no exception.
The brothers lost their lives in a tragic accident on Thursday and they were hit by a suspected drunk driver while riding their bikes in their home state of New Jersey. On Friday, fans of the Calgary Flames and Columbus Blue Jackets, the two clubs Johnny had played for in his 11 years in the NHL, left flowers and other items in memorial outside of their respective arenas.
Members of the Maple Leafs mourned sharing photos of both brothers on social media.
Maple Leafs forward Max Domi had a couple of posts. On Saturday, he shared video of Johnny talking about how he wanted to be remembered and the voice of Matthew talking about how close he was with his brother.
A GoFundMe has been established for Matthews’ family of to support his wife, Madeline and their growing baby Tripp, to help alleviate some of the financial burdens in the aftermath of the tragedy. Members of the hockey community have come in with many donations to the cause, include Leafs GM Brad Treliving, who donated $1,313. The No. 13 in honor of Johnny’s jersey number for. most of his NHL career.
PARIS (AP) — Oksana Kozyna’s Paralympic debut was sure to have some unexpected moments, but the surprise she received last week might beat anything that could have happened on the court.
The Ukrainian para badminton player was raised in an orphanage for disabled children in Dnipro, Ukraine, alongside teammate Oleksandr Chyrkov. Before her first singles match in the SL3 classification (standing with lower limb impairment), she met one of her former teachers at the orphanage — a reunion that brought back memories of learning the sport while also featuring all the emotions felt by Ukrainians as the war continues back home.
“I didn’t recognize her at first and then, when I recognized her, I just couldn’t believe it,” Kozyna said of her teacher, Svitlana Shabalina, while meeting with reporters Sunday evening. “It’s like a dream.”
Shabalina had left the orphanage years earlier and recently emigrated to Sweden. Kozyna fled Ukraine shortly after Russia attacked in 2022 and now lives with Chyrkov, two other Ukrainian athletes and their families in France, where she trained for the Paralympics.
Kozyna has been a key player in Ukrainian para badminton since winning silver at the European Championships in 2017. The 29-year-old also won Ukraine’s first world para badminton championship in 2022.
Shabalina did not plan to see her former students. Chyrkov actually surprised Shabalina while training near where she lives in Sweden. The two had stayed in touch in the years after Chyrkov left the orphanage, and he invited Shabalina to watch him and Kozyna compete. Two weeks before the games began, Shabalina decided to go.
“Ever since we began the war, we’ve tried to figure out how to do it in a proper way,” Chyrkov said. “It really helped because a lot of Ukrainians came and supported.”
Kozyna said the trio has spent the last few days discussing how life has changed since they left the orphanage. Kozyna had not seen Shabalina since before the war began.
Kozyna had her first women’s singles loss on Sunday, falling in straight sets to No. 1 seed Qonitah Ikhtiar Syakuroh of Indonesia. She will play Nigerian Mariam Bolaji for the bronze medal on Monday.
“I did have favorite pupils, (and) they were one of them,” Shabalina said about Kozyna and Chyrkov. “I loved what I do and my kids, because I really think they are like my kids.”
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Jack Leo is a student in the undergraduate certificate program at the Carmical Institute of Sports Media at the University of Georgia.