University of Illinois Wheelchair Basketball

Last updated
Illinois Fighting Illini wheelchair basketball
Illinois Fighting Illini logo.svg
Nickname Fighting Illini
Leagues National Wheelchair Basketball Association
Founded1948 (men's)
1970 (women's)
Arena Activities and Recreation Center
Location Champaign, Illinois
Team colorsBlue and orange
   
Head coachMatt Buchi (men's)
Flag of the United States.svg Stephanie Wheeler (women's)
ChampionshipsMen's National Championships (15)
Women's National Championships (14)
Website illinoiswheelchairbasketball.com/

The University of Illinois Wheelchair Basketball teams are the oldest teams of their kind in the United States.

Contents

History

Women's team playing the Alabama Crimson Tide in the 2022 National Intercollegiate Wheelchair Basketball Tournament Women's Championship 2022 National Intercollegiate Wheelchair Basketball Tournament Women's Championship (Illinois vs. Alabama) 05 (opening tip).jpg
Women's team playing the Alabama Crimson Tide in the 2022 National Intercollegiate Wheelchair Basketball Tournament Women's Championship

In 1948 the University of Illinois was the first college in the United States to establish a collegiate wheelchair basketball team, the University of Illinois Gizz Kids. Under the management and coaching of Dr. Timothy Nugent the U of I wheelchair basketball team held the first National Wheelchair Basketball Tournament in April 1949. [1] [2] Later in 1970, the University of Illinois formed the Ms. Kids, the first women’s wheelchair basketball team in country. After twenty nine years of wheelchair basketball, the university hosted the First Intercollegiate Wheelchair Basketball Tournament. Since then, the University of Illinois has hosted a number of Intercollegiate Wheelchair Basketball Tournaments claiming a total of 29 national championships between the men and women’s teams with the men holding 15 titles and the women 14 respectively. Today, the men’s team is led by head coach Matt Buchi, and the women’s head coach Stephanie Wheeler.

Camps

The University of Illinois annually hosts two camps in the summer. Premier Camp is a wheelchair basketball skills camp that is designed for experienced wheelchair basketball athletes who are looking to enhance their abilities on the court as they transition from the Junior Wheelchair Basketball Division into the Intercollegiate Wheelchair Basketball Division. Individual Camp is for athletes who are looking to learn basic wheelchair basketball skills that are the fundamentals at every level of competition.

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Timothy Nugent, who is best known as the "Father of Accessibility," founded the first comprehensive program of higher education for individuals with disabilities in 1948. He served as Professor of Rehabilitation Education and Director of the Rehabilitation Education Center and the Division of Rehabilitation Education Services (DRES) at the University of Illinois. He retired in 1985. He founded the National Wheelchair Basketball Association in 1949 and served as Commissioner for the first 25 years. He also founded Delta Sigma Omicron, a national rehabilitation service fraternity. He was President of the National Paraplegia Foundation for four terms. He has been an international lecturer and consultant, as well as an advocate, publisher, and researcher on behalf of people with disabilities. He was a leader in the development of architectural accessibility standards, public transportation, adaptive equipment, and recreation activities for people with disabilities. He has been and continues to be active in many professional organizations, including the American National Standards Institute, the Illinois State Legislative Commission on the Hospitalization of Spinal Cord Injured, the Committee on Technical Aids, Housing and Transportation of Rehabilitation International, and the Institute for the Advancement of Prosthetics.

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The United States women's national wheelchair basketball team began in the mid-1960s. The first women's team to compete alongside men in the Paralympic Games was in the inaugural 1968 tournament. A few years later in 1977, a women's wheelchair basketball division was created in the National Wheelchair Basketball Association (NWBA).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">UT Arlington Mavericks men's wheelchair basketball</span> College team representing the University of Texas at Arlington

The UT Arlington Mavericks men's wheelchair basketball team, commonly known as the Movin' Mavs and previously known as the UTA Freewheelers, is the men's college wheelchair basketball team representing the University of Texas at Arlington (UTA). Established in 1976 as the UTA Freewheelers, the team played at the club level against other colleges and universities in Texas during the 1970s and 1980s. It has played under the auspices of the National Wheelchair Basketball Association (NWBA) since 1988, when the team was renamed the Movin' Mavs. Its inaugural coach, from 1976 until 2008, was Jim Hayes. Since 2008, the team has been coached by Doug Garner.

References

  1. "Dr. Timothy Nugent passes - Founder of the NWBA". National Wheelchair Basketball Association. November 12, 2015. Retrieved January 28, 2016.
  2. Savitz, Harriet (2006). Wheelchair Champions: A History of Wheelchair Sports. Lincoln: iUniverse. ISBN   978-0595385225.