In September 2010, Tyrone Henry lay confined to an Ottawa hospital bed. His
sister, Samantha, had been driving her three brothers and a family friend
down a gravel road when she lost control of the vehicle only minutes from
home. Henry suffered a spinal cord injury and was paralyzed from the waist
down.
It would’ve been easy – perhaps even understandable – for Henry, then 16,
to feel sorry for himself, to lament what may have just been lost.
Instead…
“I knew from Day 1 in the ICU that I wanted to play for [Canada’s National
Sledge Team],” says Henry, now 23. “It was a big goal of mine to be on this
team, and to be here now is kind of surreal.”
“Here” is the 2017 IPC World Para Hockey Championship in Gangneung, South
Korea.
“I think back to that day in the hospital, and seeing how far I’ve come
since then is really cool,” he says. “I’m honoured to be part of a team
that I saw in Vancouver [at the 2010 Paralympic Winter Games] before I was
even paralyzed.”
A stand-up hockey player for more than seven years, Henry never harboured
illusions of one day playing for Canada’s National Men’s Team.
“But I could be a part of the sledge hockey team,” he says. “Just having
that outlook, being able to make the most of it and realize I could be a
part of something pretty awesome – represent my country and wear the jersey
with pride and know that everybody here is really coming from the same
place, it’s really cool being part of a team like that.”
Henry spent four months in the hospital. Active in hockey and soccer before
his accident, he took up cycling – and later waterskiing, alpine skiing and
endurance racing – only two months after coming home. By September, he was
back on the ice, playing house league with the Ottawa Falcons.
“Right away, first time in the sled, the first feeling I had was the
freedom of moving around on the ice again,” he says. He embraced playing
hockey in a new way. A defenceman as a stand-up player, he had to adjust to
not being able to move backward in the sled. “I loved the challenge of
figuring out how to make it work for me and how to be a better player.”
He also found mentors in Marc Dorion and Todd Nicholson, alumni of Canada’s
National Sledge Team.
“Having guys like that bring me up was really helpful because I didn’t know
how I was going to get [to the national team level], but they had the
experience and knew what needed to be done. Guys like that pushing me to be
better got me to where I am today.”
In spring 2014, less than four years after his accident, Henry was named to
Canada’s National Sledge Development Team for a three-game series against
the United States. He knew he had turned a corner.
“I didn’t know what to expect going in there, but being able to compete
with everyone at the development team level really opened my eyes to being
that I could actually do this, this is a dream that could be realized.”
The following season he made two more appearances with the development team
and earned his first invitation to a National Sledge Team camp. “[I saw]
that I could keep pace with everybody, and I wasn’t too far behind. Then
making [the team] the next year was everything just coming together.”
The world championship marks the fourth event Henry has played with
Canada’s National Sledge Team. (There’s also that time he lined up against
it: he was one of three Canadian up-and-comers named to Team Pan-Pacific
for the 2016 IPC Pan-Pacific Championship.) He won a silver medal this past
December at the 2016 World Sledge Hockey Challenge in Charlottetown, P.E.I.
But it’s the two gold medals he’s won at the International Ice Sledge
Hockey Tournament in Turin, Italy, in 2015 and 2017, he cites as high
points.
“And being in Korea, being able to compete for a world championship, is
kind of living a highlight right now,” he says. It’s possible it may be
even better than he envisioned it seven years ago. “It’s a really cool
feeling to be able to be a part of this group, and I’m really honoured to
be here and be a part of this team. It’s a highlight in the making, I
think.”