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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 30, 2006
USA's Libby honored with DHL Spirit Award at 2006 Paralympics
(STEVENS POINT, Wis.) - Team USA member Danell Libby of Chatham, N.Y., was
honored with the 2006 U.S. Paralympic Spirit Award Delivered by DHL at the
conclusion of the 2006 Paralympic Winter Games earlier this month in Torino,
Italy.
Libby, who took up wheelchair curling in 2002, was honored in the female
category based on her team spirit at the 2006 Paralympics, which were held March
11-19 in Torino, Italy. Also honored were skier Andy Parr of Rockland, Maine,
and the 2006 U.S. Paralympic Sled Hockey Team. |
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"I was very surprised that I received this award, but truly honored," said
Libby, 38, a mother of one son, Jeffrey. "Whenever I have competed in these
sorts of competitions - Nationals, Worlds, and now the Paralympics - I have
always been inspired by the other competitors. I seem to always be in awe of
their dedication and the barriers that they have broke to get where they are. I
have never stopped to look at myself in this manner.
"Receiving this award has made me take a moment and think about this," Libby
went on. "And now looking back and seeing that for the past four years I have
done whatever it has taken to reach the Paralympics by traveling, sacrificing
time with my family, taking a cut in pay at work, and practicing three to four
times a week...it feels really good to have made Team USA, and that others
recognized my dedication."
The U.S. Olympic Spirit Awards history began in 1968, when it was created by the
U.S. Olympic Committee to honor the extraordinary achievements of the United
States' athletes. In 2000, the award was expanded to include the U.S. Paralympic
Spirit Award, recognizing the excellence and efforts of athletes with physical
disabilities.
Libby, who works as at statewide systems advocate network coordinator for the
New York Association on Independent Living, has represented the U.S. at two
world championships (2002, 2004) and was the only female member of the
wheelchair curling team at the 2006 Parlaympics, where the team finished 2-5.
"I can't thank those enough who voted for me and felt that I was deserving and
that I showed true 'spirit' of the games," Libby said. "I felt very proud to be
representing the U.S. I was also very proud to be representing curling for the
first time as a Paralympic sport, and am look forward to watching it grow."
The winners will be honored at a U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Team celebration
dinner on May 16 in Washington D.C. DHL is the Official Express Delivery and
Logistics Provider of the 2006 United States Olympic and Paralympic Teams. DHL
will provide a grant of $5,000 on behalf of each of the winners to a qualified
Paralympic-related non-profit organization of their choice.
"The $5,000 I will be giving to Sitrin in Utica, N.Y., with no question," Libby
said. The Charles T. Sitrin Health Care Center has been extremely supportive of
the U.S. wheelchair curling teams, physically, financially and emotionally.
"They have been so instrumental in developing wheelchair curling in New York and
also supporting and getting people with disabilities interested in many other
sports," said Libby. "They have done a tremendous job in reconnecting people
back into their communities through sports, and I couldn't think of a more
deserving non-profit organization to receive this money."
Libby also is active in wheelchair basketball and tennis and was named Ms.
Wheelchair for the State of Maine in 2004.
Photos of Libby are available for your use at
www.usacurl.org/athletes/danell.libby.htm.
USA Curling is sponsored by AIT Worldwide Logistics, AmerAust Technologies,
Hilton and Nike as well as by AT&T, General Motors, The Home Depot, and Bank of
America through a joint marketing program with the U.S. Olympic Committee.
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For more information: Rick Patzke, USA Curling, rick.patzke@usacurl.org,
715-344-1199
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