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Golfers
with disabilities to play in benefit tournament
Players with disabilities adapt to stay in swing of benefit tournament
By BRAD WILLIAMS, williamsbr@knews.com April 7, 2007
When
Gary Kupfer pulled off Interstate 40 one day six years ago, he knew
something was wrong.
What
he didn't know at the time was that he was having a stroke. "I could
have stayed in the car and died," he said.
Instead,
he got out and walked a mile to his home, dragging one leg.
"The
words 'I quit,' it's just not in my vocabulary," he said.
That's
why Kupfer plans to be one of about six golfers with disabilities
in East Tennessee Technology Access Center Inc.'s Mack French &
Phil Williams Golf Tournament on April 23 at Fox Den Country Club.
ETTAC
provides technological assistance to people with disabilities to
improve their enjoyment of life and independence, serving about
1,000 people each year.
"When
(ETTAC) asked me if I needed any special accommodation, I said,
'I'm going to need somebody to watch my golf ball for me, because
I can't see it,' " said Kupfer, who lost part of his vision as a
result of the stroke. "I can still hit a golf ball. I just can't
see where it goes."
Brett
LeSueur can't see the ball at all, but recently he took third place
in a golf tournament for the blind in the Midwest.
LeSueur
didn't start playing seriously until 2005, but his personal-best
score is 121, quite competitive in blind golf. Last year he hit
a 275-yard drive.
"That
was the longest, straightest drive in the ETTAC tournament last
year," LeSueur said. "If I hit the ball, I'm already happy no matter
how far it goes."
He
said 275 yards was a rarity. He hits with a little help from his
coach or caddy.
"Blind
golf is a team sport," LeSueur said. "They have to line you up and
tell you your distance."
Often
it's his mom or friends. His coach, 2006 state PGA Teacher of the
Year Des Mahoney, pushes him to achieve more.
"He
says I have talent, and that's what encourages me to keep playing
and keep trying to do better," LeSueur said. "My goal is to play
in the national championship (for blind golf). That's what I'm working
for '07."
LeSueur
lifts weights and trains with a backyard net and a 16-foot putting
green he built in his basement, or at Rick Hill's Chapman Highway
Driving Range, where Hill lines him up to swing. He's trying to
find a group to play on the course with regularly.
"When
I practice, I think that every shot that I take, that's one shot
closer to making it there," LeSueur said.
He
said he hopes his playing will inspire other golfers with disabilities
to get out and do things they think they can't.
High-tech
help A car accident paralyzed Rick Slaughter from the waist
down. That was 1979. He's since been No. 2 in the nation in singles
wheelchair tennis and No. 1 in doubles.
He's
also a golfer. Less than three years ago, a SoloRider golf cart
brought him to the tee box.
Slaughter
tees up his ball with a tool and drives from an outstretched swivel
seat. The cart can go anywhere on a typical course, even sand traps.
Rob
Witherington, southeastern regional manager with SoloRider and a
sponsor at the event, said it's a help to seniors, too.
"The
baby boomers are turning 60 and there's going to be a big wave of
senior play," Witherington said. He said because people can strap
into the seat, which will actually lift up and tilt to put a golfer
in a standing position to swing from the cart, seniors with hip
or knee problems, difficulty breathing or fatigue can keep playing.
The
golfers encourage others not to give up.
Kupfer
played his last full round in 2004, after his stroke. At the time,
he thought it marked an end to 40 years of golfing.
But
he said he can't put down his clubs for good.
"Never
think that you can't do anything," Kupfer said. "If your heart's
in it and your mind is in it, you can get your body to do it."
Brad
Williams may be reached at 865-342-6432.
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