National & InternationalTop StoriesNPR Topics: World NPR Topics: Nation Art & Culture NPR Topics: Business Metro & StateJohn ArchibaldLocal Government With Kyle Whitmire Conservation: The Behavior Gap Magic City Marketplace The Price of Poverty Price of Poverty: Time Banks Price of Poverty: Involuntary Flextime Price of Poverty: Buy-a-Meter Birmingham-Southern's Struggles: a Student Perspective Price of Poverty: Food Deserts Remembering Cecil Whitmire Occupational Tax Settlement Child Care Subsidies at Risk Robert Bentley Vestavia Hills: Library in the Forest Hotel Tax Dispute Oil Spill and Hair Sausages Anne Frank and Me Jefferson County Commission Runoff On the Line: Ask the Mayor Midwives in Alabama The Future of the Jefferson County Commission New EPA Sulfur Dioxide Rules Alabama Gubernatorial Primary 2010 Alabama and the Oil Spill: Seafood Safety Alabama and the Oil Spill: One Family's Story Bike to Work The ASO plays Carnegie Hall Alabama and the Oil Spill: Hurricane Season News Features Archive |
![]() ![]()
In goalball, everyone is trying to get hit. "It's basically reverse dodge-ball. It's three on three. And instead of getting out of the way, you're diving on a gym floor about 80 times a game or getting smacked by the ball going 40-45 miles an hour. If you're doing your job right."
She and the rest of the Women's Team USA - winners of the silver in the 2004 Athens games -- are playing in a tournament that runs through the weekend. It's a way to practice up for the Paralympics that start in September. "The big prize is China. So this is just a step in that direction, to see how we match up and get a chance to look at those three teams over, you know, four days."
Janice Dawson coaches the team and says the physical nature of it can be bruising. The players are padded but still must lunge in the direction of a sound - the ball with bells in it - to stop it from going into the goal. "They basically go down on the floor and stretch out as far as they can to take up as much space as they can so they can block the ball. (So they sort of take a dive?) They sort of take a dive. (Isn't that painful?) Not if you do it properly. On Lakeshore's hard, wooden floor, they're even practicing that. "You know practice makes perfect. It's true. The more you practice, the more you get to learn about the ball and about your opponents and who's throwing and how they throw."
"I find one of the hardest shots to block is a curve shot. Because it sounds like it's coming from one way and it sneaks around you." Team USA's Asya Miller feels her pain. "That's really the whole point of the sport is to try to figure that out and to kind of hone your instincts. And you practice and you do a lot of practice and a lot of defensive drills. The tournament is nothing new to Lakeshore, which has hosted wheelchair tennis and basketball tournaments and is an official Paralympics training facility. Jeff Underwood is its president.
Underwood - who plays a key role in the Paralympics games -- says he's witnessed so many athletes who have overcome physical and visual impairments that it makes him wonder how anyone couldn't take these players seriously. "Try playing any sport with your eyes closed and I think that perception changes." The tournament runs through Sunday with the medal games starting at 2 PM and a very quiet public is encouraged to come and watch.
~Steve Chiotakis, July 11, 2008 |



| Birmingham -- Like the ancient Greek athlete from centuries ago - with a discus-in-tow, the modern Olympian at Lakeshore's training facility rears back and heaves a ball across a basketball court that's modified with tactile tape, and extra-wide goals. The tape is so the visually-impaired players can figure out their position; the goals to catch the balls that are rolled or thrown at the other side.