I think the idea of getting a bigger grassroots level is really important. It's like hockey. Kids go and play and they say, “Oh, I want to be like that person”. Then there's a pool to grab them from.
With disabled people, get them to get out and, for example, to ride a bicycle, or to ride a tandem with somebody, if they have a visual impairment. You can get them out of their house. You can get them socializing with an individual, and they can go for a beer or they go for an ice cream afterward. Then they think, “I kind of like this. Maybe I'm going to try to be elite”. My foundation is trying to get adults involved, and we do go to the school in Brampton and get high school students involved. We're doing that. I'd love to get kids involved, because that way they can have dreams and hopes to do more later, and get that working.
I think, right now, just getting people involved is very important. I have played sports all my life. I started playing soccer when I was six years old and I went to the Ontario Cup, and I went to Canada Cup. I went all over the country playing, and that was really important. I stayed in Canada to go to university. I was a goalie, so I could have gotten a scholarship in the United States and maybe stayed there. But I'm proud to be Canadian and I'm happy I'm here.
Getting hopes and dreams in disabled people's lives and getting them involved in recreation is way more important than saying, “Let's go find the elites”. I think by getting young people and young adults involved, we can get more elites that way.