Age no issue to 'world's oldest kayaker'
Pascale Bercovitch, who calls herself the world's oldest kayaker, has failed to win a medal at the three previous Paralympic Games, but said she remains hopeful because "she's a better athlete at 54 than at 20".
The French-Israeli national rowed for the Jewish state at Beijing 2008, competed in handcycling at London 2012 and paracanoeing at Rio 2016. At the Tokyo Games, she will compete in the 200-meter paracanoe sprint, which gets underway on Sept 2.
She had both her legs amputated at age 17 following a train accident in France.
"I wanted to board the train. The opposite happened," she told AFP before a training session on Tel Aviv's Yarkon River.
She won a paracanoe bronze at the 2020 World Cup, and affirmed her age would not inhibit her from Tokyo success.
"I am the oldest kayaker in the world, but I don't really look at numbers," she said, insisting she was "faster and stronger" than she was in her 20s.
Maintaining a level of fitness that surpasses that of her youth requires discipline, said Bercovitch, who has two daughters.
"I don't eat what I want to eat, I eat what I have to eat. I sleep when I have to sleep. I live a nun's life," she said with a smile that seems to be a permanent fixture on her face.
She is known widely in Israel for delivering speeches about her life experiences, but the former journalist said her "passion" for sports is her primary focus.
The postponement of the Games, which kicked off on Tuesday following the one-year pandemic-enforced delay, demanded an extra level of commitment.
"It's been another year of maintaining the discipline... There were lockdowns. I was training in my garden," she said.
Bercovitch said she can no longer picture herself as not being in a wheelchair and that she sees herself as "super cute".
"I'm a meter tall, I'm 45 kilos, I'm in a small wheelchair and I go super fast, everywhere, all the time - that's me!" she said.
Israel used to be a Paralympic powerhouse, but its medal haul has diminished in recent years, partly because significantly fewer soldiers have been severely wounded in battle than during the initial decades following Israel's creation in 1948.
In Tokyo, the 33-strong Israeli team hopes to surpass the three medals won in Rio.
She did not rule out competing in 2024 in Paris, the city where she was born, but for now her focus is exclusively on Tokyo.
"It's going to be tight," Bercovitch said, "but I'm going to give it my all and hope for a good outcome."
AFP
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