Calgary goalball athlete headed to Tokyo as veteran on the team - Action News
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Calgary goalball athlete headed to Tokyo as veteran on the team

With one Paralympics under her belt, Meghan Mahon is a veteran on Canada's goalball team a game where silence is key.

Meghan Mahon will compete in her second Paralympics later this month

Competing in the Rio Paralympics in 2016, Mahon said she was like 'a sponge,' learning as much as she could. Now she's a veteran on the team. (Dave Holland/Canadian Paralympic Committee)

The Paralympics don't start until Aug. 24, but Canada's goalball team is leaving for Japan on Monday. They're doing a training camp in Sapporo before the Games begin.

For Calgary athlete Meghan Mahon, it's just starting to sink in.

"Ayear ago, we didn't know if this was going to be something that was going to carry forward. We didn't know what the state of the world would be," she told The Homestretchon Thursday.

"And now we're four days away from leaving, and it's starting to feel very real."

Mahon is a goalball veteran. It'sa sport designedspecifically for athletes with visual impairment. This will be her second Paralympics after Rio in 2016 but she's feeling very different this time around.

"I went [to Rio] as a very young, very new athlete with a team of veterans around me and supporting me, going to basically just be a sponge and be able to absorb anything I could," she said.

"And this time I'm going in on more of the leadership side of the team."

Though it's still just as exciting, she said there's bit more pressure this time around.

'You want to hear quiet'

Goalball is played on a volleyball court with three players on each side. On each side of the court, the back nine metres aretaken up by a net.

The teams throw a three-pound hard rubber ball at each other in a bowling motion that gets up to 55 km/h. A bell inside the ball helps players who all wear black eyeshades hear where the ball is going, as theydive to block itfrom going in the net.

Mahon makes a save. The three-pound ball can get up to 55 km/h, making the non-contact sport still very physical. (Dave Holland/Canadian Paralympic Committee)

"As much as it's not a contact sport, it's a very physical sport," said Mahon.

"And really all that we're relying on is the communication of our team members on the court because our coaches and the rest of our team on the bench are not able to talk to us during play.And then we're also just relying on hearing the ball."

Before each play starts, the referees will call for quiet in the stands.

"When you walk into your normal sport venue, you hear cheering, you hear clapping, you hear everyone just getting really excited," said Mahon. "When you walk into a goalballvenue, you want to hear quiet."

So if there are no spectators allowed at the Games, she said that might not be so bad.

Olympic expectations

Mahon said Canada is heading into the Games as an underdog, having scraped into qualifying. But she said the additional year of practice has been an advantage.

"We've gotten a lot of growth under us in the last year and really just dedicated our time forward," she said.

Almost two years without international competition has left the playing field a little uncertain.

"We are just really going in to do our job and perform to the calibre that we know that we can perform," said Mahon,"and not try to anticipate what other teams are going to do or what other teams think we can do."


With files from The Homestretch.