Ten USC athletes to compete in Paralympics

USC arts student Katja Dedekind has flown to Tokyo for the Paralympic Games.

Ten athletes affiliated with USC have flown to Tokyo for the Paralympic Games, which began with an opening ceremony on Tuesday 24 August.

Six of the athletes – Ben Hance, Blake Cochrane, Braedan Jason, Katja Dedekind, Keira Stephens and Ruby Storm – are USC Spartans swimmers, while one is former Spartans swimmer Ellie Cole who completed a cross-institutional degree while at USC.

The contingent also includes USC graduate and wheelchair basketballer Hannah Dodd, cyclist Alistair Donohoe who trains with the USC-based Pro Racing Sunshine Coast, and wheelchair rugby player Chris Bond who receives coaching and training advice from USC’s High Performance Sport academics.

Dedekind, a USC Bachelor of Arts student, is eager to compete at her second Paralympics after winning bronze in 100m backstroke in Rio when she was just 15.

She said attending the Games with such a large group from USC, including Spartans coach Nathan Doyle, would help her stay relaxed ahead of her events in 50m freestyle, 100m backstroke and 400m freestyle.

“To be heading to Tokyo with the people that I see every day and I swim with, I think it’s going to make it much easier to be away from home for so long,” she said.

“They’re like my second family now.

“I actually don’t have a dream job out of swimming. I think I am living that dream where I get to be an athlete 24/7 and I get to go and represent my country at the Paralympics, not just for the first time, but for the second time as well.”

Five of the other athletes have competed previously at the Paralympics, with Cochrane and Cole now both four-time Paralympians, Bond attending his third Games, and Jason and Dodd making their second appearances.

Dodd competed in equestrian at the London Games in 2012, and her selection for wheelchair basketball makes her one of only two athletes bound for Tokyo who have represented Australia in more than one sport at the Paralympics.