Canada's curlers 1st team announced for 2026 Paralympic Winter Games
Fewer than 110 days until the start of the Paralympics in Milan-Cortina, wheelchair curler Collinda Joseph feels more confident and free shooting rocks, which are delivered using a stick rather than gliding along the ice.
Four years ago, she was more limited in her role as an alternate at the Beijing Games. The then-56-year-old appeared in one game, but helped Canada’s mixed team to a second consecutive bronze medal by offering feedback on how rocks were behaving on the ice to boosting her teammates' spirits when they faced adversity.
Joseph had previously captured her first provincial championship in 2009 and secured her first Ontario title as a skip in 2016. She first represented Canada in 2019, the first of Joseph's four world championship appearances.
In China, she quickly discovered the tough role of being an alternate.
“It’s tough because if you’re at that [Paralympic] level, you’re already a competitive person,” Joseph said Monday at CBC Sports headquarters in Toronto, where the Ottawa native was among five athletes named to Canada’s wheelchair curling squad for the March 6-15 Games in Italy.
“You want to be part of the team and be doing something you feel is a benefit to the team and part of a winning environment. Finding a way to do that as an alternate is incredibly difficult.”
This time, Joseph will be a starter as Canada’s lead, joining skip Mark Ideson, second Ina Forrest, third Jon Thurston and alternate Gilbert Dash, a multiple national champion making his Paralympic debut.
“Knowing that I’m named as the starting lead [for Milan-Cortina] leaves me in a position to be OK with some of the mistakes I make and any missed shots knowing I have another opportunity to make up for it. It’s a much more


