Playing for Keeps: Linda Mastandrea
Her wheelchair politics pave the way for disabled athletes
January/February 2000
By Andy Steiner, Utne Reader
S
RELATED ARTICLES
Every Sunday at 10:40 a.m.--sometimes a few minutes later when there's a holiday, a confirmation, o...
To Live With No Regrets September October 2005 By Nina Utne Death is a transition for the dying an...
For Guatemalan Campesinos, the Civil War Continues Compesino occupation of Nueva Linda finca plant...
printer Linda Mastandrea holds two Olympic medals, but she didn't start racing until she was in her 20s. In fact, for the first part of her life, no one, including herself, thought she could ever be athletic.
"As a kid growing up with cerebral palsy, I couldn't run, I couldn't jump, I couldn't even walk very well," Mastandrea, 35, says. "So I spent a lot of time on the sidelines. People assumed sports were out of the picture for me."
Today, she's leading a campaign to raise the profile--and funding--of Paralympic athletics. An attorney and advocate in the Chicago office of the nonprofit America's Athletes with Disabilities, Mastandrea has been a member of the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) board of directors since 1998, and is using her position to be a "thorn in the side" of the other members, pushing and prodding them to provide equal funding and recognition for Paralympic athletes.
Her goals are numerous, but she's convinced they're attainable. They include securing funding and training facilities for disabled athletes, providing Paralympians with the option of joining the health insurance plan provided to able-bodied Olympians, and encouraging media attention and exposure for Paralympic events, which are currently held immediately following the closing ceremonies of the "real" Olympic Games.
"Paralympic athletes have struggled under the USOC leadership for years," Mastandrea says. "In many ways, it comes down to money. There's a perception that athletes with disabilities are not marketable, and therefore supporting us is a charity thing. But I think a lot of people--able-bodied or not--identify with people with disabilities. An athlete is an athlete is an athlete. If you love sports, you love sports. I'm here to attest that the thrill of the game can change your life. It doesn't matter if you're in a wheelchair or if you are standing."