Home » Winter Paralympics 2026: From juggling to tennis, how do athletes prepare for Para ice hockey?

Winter Paralympics 2026: From juggling to tennis, how do athletes prepare for Para ice hockey?

by NNW Bureau
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What makes Para ice hockey unique? The answer: just about everything.

With rapid action, physical battles and relentless intensity, the sport will take centre stage in Milan at the Milano Cortina 2026 Paralympic Winter Games. If ice hockey was a spectacle of its own, it is time for Para ice hockey to claim the spotlight.

Ahead of the start of competition on 7 February, all eight teams had the chance to train on the main ice at the brand-new Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena.

The same surface it may be, but the equipment is one-of-a-kind: athletes compete with two sticks instead of one, each with spike ends on one end and blades on the other.

“Players will use these to propel themselves down the ice, so they’ll use these to skate, stick handle and shoot,” AJ Hurley, Team Canada’s equipment manager, tells Olympics.com. “There are very sharp picks on the ends, and they’re angled so that, when players reach in front of them, they’ll dig in and it provides them push back.”

The spikes are no child’s play: they are sharp enough to break through players’ gloves, penetrate their team kit and scratch up sledges. Yet they also represent a significant advancement in the sport, which six-time Paralympian Greg Westlake can attest to.

“The sticks are all now one piece,” Westlake tells Olympics.com, two decades since his debut. “When I started, it was a regular stand-up hockey stick cut with a wooden insert for Para ice hockey, and then you added the picks to it. It was heavier; they broke more. The sticks now are lighter, we shoot the puck harder, we pass it faster.”

    Milano Cortina 2026 – juggling balls, the secret to Para ice hockey prowess

    One of the key components of Para ice hockey is hand-eye coordination, a fundamental skill to efficiently switch the function of their sticks. Athletes demonstrate it by effortlessly passing the puck under their sledge as if they were dribbling a ball.

    It turns out that it is an ability aptly developed outside of the rink. Westlake and USA captain Josh Pauls have won a combined eight Paralympic medals, and they are not just two of the top dogs in the sport – they are also juggling experts.

    “I’m a pretty good juggler,” says Westlake, while quipping, “I can show you some juggling moves! But I think hand-eye coordination is huge in our sport. That ability to transition up and down the stick, play with the puck. Like anything in life, it’s a sheer amount of hours grinding when nobody’s watching, small progressions over time.”

    The 39-year-old, who also has used tennis to both train and switch off from the ice, adds: “I think it’s a great lesson for everybody: whether you’re a high-performance athlete or a weekend warrior, small gains over a long time can go a long way. And the best athletes in the world, that’s their approach.”

    Four-time Paralympic champion and Team USA’s male flagbearer Pauls works meticulously on his wrist strength. He tells Olympics.com: “I juggle to get ready for hand-eye coordination. That’s something that has really improved my game.

    “I noticed I bat more pucks out of the air, I’m able to settle things down a little bit better than before. We also put an intense strain on our joints, especially that one joint when we’re picking and then shooting. Most stand-up hockey players, their stick flexes. Our sticks don’t really flex, it’s our arm doing that.”

    The New Jersey native is the United States’ captain at Milano Cortina 2026, honouring his grandfather’s Italian roots on home ice. The only player to win four Paralympic gold medals in the sport is aiming to make it five in a row at the helm of the squad.

    READ MORE: https://www.olympics.com/en/milano-cortina-2026/paralympic-games/news/winter-paralympics-2026-juggling-tennis-how-athletes-train-para-ice-hockey

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