Timothy McIsaac

Timothy McIsaac
Personal information
Nationality Canadian
Born (1959-01-10) 10 January 1959
Winnipeg, Manitoba
Sport
Country  Canada
Sport Paralympic swimming
Disability Blindness
Disability class A, B1
Club St. James Seals Swim Club (1976-1992)
Coached by Wilf and Audrey Strom
Retired 1992

Timothy McIsaac (born 10th January 1959) is a retired Canadian Paralympic swimmer, who was born blind. He was one of the first blind swimmers to do a tumble turn in an international competition. He began swimming at the Ross MacDonald School for the Blind in Brantford, Ontario [1].

Biography

McIsaac was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba and has been blind since birth. When he was six years old, he would spend ten months of every year living in residence at the school and was far away from home. His father kept in contact with him whenever he attended business trips in Toronto or McIsaac would telephone his family every other week. [2]

Swimming career

Swimming motivation

McIsaac started swimming when he was aged 13: his determination to start focussing on swimming was when he was involved in a car accident in September 1973 outside of his parents' house. He suffered from fractures in both of his legs and a compound fracture on his right arm.

Start of his swimming career

McIsaac first competed in a major competition in 1975 aged sixteen at the Ontario Games for the Physically Disabled held in Cambridge. He had only been swimming for three years but he won five gold medals at his first Games. [3]

Contributions

He has been awarded the Viscount Alexander Award for Junior Male Athlete of the Year in 1976 after his success at the 1976 Summer Paralympics. He won another title in 1982 for being the Athlete of the Year in Manitoba and was honored in Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame in 2000.

As well as being the most decorated Canadian Paralympian and the first blind swimmer to the tumble turn, McIsaac is a legendary role model and his success, along with teammate Michael Edgson, they helped to build the paths of future star swimmers like Donovan Tildesley, Valerie Grand'Maison and Amber Thomas who are all blind swimmers.

References

  1. "Tim McIsaac - Swimming Canada". Swimming Canada. 9 August 2018.
  2. "Tim McIsaac - The Canadian Encyclopedia". The Canadian Encyclopedia. 9 August 2018.
  3. "Tim McIsaac - The Canadian Encyclopedia". The Canadian Encyclopedia. 9 August 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.