Beijing 2022 Day 3 Preview: Canada racing for medals in Para alpine, Para nordic and Para snowboard

Lisa DeJong is one of four Canadian Para snowboarders competing in the snowboard cross finals on Monday at the Beijing 2022 Paralympic Winter Games. PHOTO: Canadian Paralympic Committee (CNW Group/Canadian Paralympic Committee (Sponsorships))

BEIJINGMarch 6, 2022 /CNW/ – Day three of the Beijing 2022 Paralympic Winter Games is a packed schedule for the Canadian Paralympic Team, including the first race for the nation’s most successful winter Paralympian, Brian McKeever. He highlights a strong field for Canada in cross country action. Athletes will also be racing for medals in Para alpine skiing and Para snowboard, while round-robin play continues in wheelchair curling. Here is what’s on tap for March 7:

Para Alpine Skiing
The third consecutive day of Para alpine skiing will see Canada’s athletes contest in the super combined, starting with the Super-G (races start at 9:30 a.m. local / 8:30 p.m. Sunday ET) followed by the slalom (beginning at 1:45 p.m. local / 12:45 a.m. ET).

Para Nordic Skiing
Mark Arendz looks for his second medal of the Games in the men’s standing category following his bronze in the six-kilometre biathlon, and will kick start competition for the Canadians on Sunday at 10 a.m. local / 9 p.m. ET Sunday in the long distance cross country event.

Brian McKeever, winner of 17 Paralympic medals in his storied career, is the three-time defending champion in the men’s visually impaired 20-kilometre race (10:35 a.m. local / 9:35 p.m. ET Sunday), and will ski with guides Graham Nishikawa and Russell Kennedy as was the case four years ago in PyeongChang. The race will mark his sixth Paralympic Winter Games appearance.

Brittany HudakNatalie Wilkie and Emily Young then give Canada a powerful trio in the women’s standing 15-kilometre race (12:15 p.m. local /11:15 p.m. ET Sunday).

Para Snowboard
World champion Tyler Turner heads to the men’s SB-LL1 men’s snowboard cross playoff round as the top qualifier. Canada’s other entries, Lisa DeJong and Sandrine Hamel in the women’s SB-LL2 and Alex Massie in men’s SB-LL2, are also in the head-to-head matchups. Action starts at 11:30 a.m. local / 10:30 p.m. ET Sunday.

Wheelchair Curling
Canada looks to stay undefeated in tournament play after improving to 3-0 with a victory over Latvia on Sunday. Next up is USA (1-2) at 9:35 a.m. local / 8:35 p.m. ET Sunday followed by Sweden (2-0) at 7:35 p.m. local / 6:35 a.m. ET.

CLICK HERE for the complete Canadian Paralympic Team schedule on March 7.

HOW TO WATCH

All Canadian competition can be live streamed as it happens. Live streams can be found on Paralympic.ca, CPC’s YouTube channel, cbc.ca/beijing2022 and Radio-Canada.ca/jeux-paralympiques, the free CBC Gem streaming service, the Radio-Canada Sports app, and CBC Sports app for iOS and Android devices. Anyone wishing to catch up on the action afterwards can also watch events on-demand on these platforms, as well as Amazon Prime Video.

March 7 Canadian TV Broadcasts:

CBC Late Night – 12 a.m. local 
CBC Daytime – 3 p.m. local
Sportsnet One – 10 a.m. ET / 7 a.m. PT
Radio-Canada – 1 p.m. ET
Radio-Canada – 11:05 p.m. ET
*please check local listings*

Click here for the complete broadcast schedule.

SOURCE Canadian Paralympic Committee (Sponsorships)

About Alwin Marshall-Squire 15587 Articles
Alwin Marshall-Squire is the Editor-in-Chief of S-Q Publications Inc., overseeing editorial strategy for GTA Weekly, GTA Today, and Vision Newspaper. He leads the publications’ mission to deliver bold, original journalism focused on the people and communities of the Greater Toronto Area, Canada, and the global Caribbean diaspora. Also writes for GTA Weekly and GTA Today.

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