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USABA to oversee blind football, goalball in the USA

Date: January 20, 2022

Category: Blind football

IBSA member, the United States Association of Blind Athletes (USABA), has received the highest level of certification from the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee (USOPC) to become the national governing body for blind soccer, globally known as blind football, a sport in which Team USA will make its Paralympic debut as the host nation of the Los Angeles 2028 Games.

The certification was approved at the USOPC board of directors meeting in December. The USOPC also certified USABA as the national governing body for goalball, giving the organisation charge over two Paralympic team sports.

“USABA has successfully proven itself as the high-performance management organisation for goalball since 1976, and now we boldly look to the future and proudly accept the challenge of developing the exciting sport of blind soccer in the United States,” said USABA CEO Molly Quinn. “We are building blind soccer from the ground up, having already initiated grassroots opportunities across the US over the past several years by hosting blind soccer clinics and camps to educate physical education teachers, coaches and players. Soccer is the most recognised sport across the US and through our growing partnership with US Soccer as a member organisation, we will utilize the club soccer pipeline to introduce players to the sport.”

USABA’s development and level of international success in the sport of goalball directly contributed to the organisation’s certification as blind soccer’s national governing body. Goalball has been a part of the Paralympic Games since its inception in 1976 and the United States has been a consistent worldwide leader in the sport, garnering 12 Paralympic Games medals and 11 World Championship medals. Those totals are more than twice as many as any other country. At the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics, the US goalball teams continued that legacy of success as both reached the medal round, with the men finishing fourth and the women winning the silver medal.

An exciting adaptation of the world’s most popular sport, blind football is played in more than 60 countries and has become the fastest-growing Paralympic sport in the world. Blind football has been part of the Paralympic Games since Athens 2004 but the US has never fielded a team in an international competition. That will all change in the coming years as USABA develops a national team to compete at international competitions leading up to LA28.

“With this national governing body designation from the USOPC, the United States Association of Blind Athletes will strive to attain the same competitive excellence with blind soccer as it has successfully done with goalball,” said USABA Board Chair Mark Ackermann. “These two Paralympic sports provide Americans who are blind or visually impaired greater access to a healthy lifestyle as well as the camaraderie that comes with participating in a team sport. Our spectacular leadership team at USABA will be working diligently in the years ahead to assure that we field the best possible goalball and blind soccer teams in the Paralympic Games.”

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