Mark DeMontis

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The AMI and CNIB sponsored Courage Canada Blind Hockey Tournament kicks off on Feb. 13, and it will be a celebration of the incredible growth of blind hockey. Courage Canada founder Mark DeMontis says the tournament is sure to inspire those who watch.

When the AMI 2015 Courage Canada Blind Hockey Tournament kicks off on Feb. 13, it will be a celebration of an incredible effort by Mark DeMontis and the Courage Canada team – an effort that has seen the tournament grow, teach and inspire those who participate, watch and volunteer.

Diagnosed with Leber’s optic neuropathy, a rare degenerative eye disease, DeMontis was left blind by age 17. A promising hockey player before losing his vision, DeMontis said he went into a depression from age 19 to 22, something he accredited to being away from the game for so long. In search for something to inspire, DeMontis looked to Chris Delaney, an athlete who after losing his vision to Leber’s like DeMontis, rode across Canada on a tandem bicycle in 1996.

“One day I was looking at my bedside at my parent’s home in Weston, and I had an old pair of rollerblades just sitting there,” said DeMontis. “I remember going to bed that night, and I just had this vision in my head of being on skates across the country, meeting people and getting something moving and started. I didn’t exactly know what that was, but shortly after I realized what I was passionate about was the sport of blind hockey.”

In 2009, DeMontis turned himself back into an athlete, hit the gym hard, and prepared to make a journey, just like Delaney had more than a decade before him. DeMontis, then 22, took a pair of rollerblades and set off on a 5,000-kilometer trek from Toronto to Vancouver. It was more than simply a show of dedication, stamina, or ability; it was a skate towards making a dream become reality. The journey from Canada’s largest city to the West Coast made Courage Canada come to life and allowed DeMontis to create an organization to give other visually impaired athletes their chance to take part in Canada’s game.

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