UC starts adaptive athletics program
Program director and coach Jacob Counts spoke with WOSU Columbus Public Radio about the new UC Adaptive Athletics program that gives the opportunity for athletes with disabilities to compete in collegiate sports.
Counts said the need for a college-level program became more apparent as the adaptive sports community has grown in Cincinnati. UC faculty members Victoria Heasley, MeMe Earnest-Stanley and Danny Meyer were among the cofounders of nonprofit The Bridge Adaptive Sports & Recreation along with Counts and connected with Heidi Pettyjohn, executive director of UC Accessibility Resources, to work toward launching the program.
"They saw the need of a collegiate adaptive sports program, because we were getting to a point in Cincinnati where we're producing a lot of really good high school athletes and then sending them off to other colleges like Arizona and Alabama and Michigan and Illinois,” Counts told WOSU. “So, we were basically exporting our talent."
The program has launched with adaptive track and field and adaptive tennis with four student athletes, and Counts said he is hoping to expand to around 30 student athletes and potentially other sports within the next five years.
"It's really important to give us disabled athletes the same opportunities that they're able-bodied peers have,” said Counts. “College is definitely a great place for a young person to grow academically and as a person, but it's also crucial for athletic success. Those are years where athletes really develop their skills and prepare to take the next step.”
Listen to or read the WOSU interview and story.
Read more about UC Adaptive Athletics.
Featured photo at top: Left to right: UC student-athletes Jaime Mazzi and Logan Cover, UC Adaptive Athletics Coach Jacob Counts and student-athlete Seth Miller. Photo/Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand.
Latest UC News
- Watch: CCM alum Kathleen Shimeta discusses composer Gena Branscombe and promoting equity in musicWatch the next alumni guest lecture presented as part of CCM Speaks, led by the UC Alumni Association. UC College-Conservatory of Music alum Kathleen Shimeta presents "Bringing Back Branscombe: A Woman Composer Lost – Now Found."
- Hoxworth showcases leadership, innovation at conferenceHoxworth Blood Center had a prominent role at this year’s Association for the Advancement of Blood & Biotherapies (AABB) Annual Meeting, showcasing its leadership and expertise in transfusion medicine, biotherapies and apheresis. The conference, a global event for the blood and biotherapies industry, brought together professionals, scientists and experts to share the latest advancements, research and best practices.
- Study finds use of prenatal cannabis may affect behavior of children laterAaron Murnan, PhD, assistant professor in the UC College of Nursing, is a co-author of a study that shows the use of cannabis during a mother's pregnancy can affect thinking and learning skills and lead to greater aggression in exposed children
- Discovery in Action Showcase spotlights UC College of Arts and SciencesThe University of Cincinnati College of Arts and Sciences has hosted its first Discovery in Action Showcase, bringing together the wide range of disciplines under the A&S umbrella to show the community the hard work and research being done behind the scenes. Students, faculty, and researchers filled the TUC Great Hall with engaging poster presentations and immersive demonstrations displaying the diverse, creative work being done through the College of Arts and Sciences.
- Food pantry experience proves challenging, rewarding for UC studentsGraduate student Kindall Coley and Kassidy Meyer, a fellow nutrition and dietetics student in UC's College of Allied Health Sciences, spent last summer working for Pantry4Health, a service of St. Vincent de Paul Choice Food Pantry and St. Vincent de Paul Charitable Pharmacy.
- $4 million gift from Jay and Jyoti Chaudhry supports UC first-gen studentsJagtar “Jay” Chaudhry, CEAS ’82, ’83, Bus ’86, and P. Jyoti Chaudhry, Bus ’87, have established the Chaudhry Family Scholarship Fund with a $4 million gift to the University of Cincinnati. It will support first-generation, Pell-eligible students in UC’s Gen-1 1MPACT House, a residential community.