hands is not allowed, the wheelchair-on-wheelchair hits are brutal.
During training, Santer members raced around the basketball-sized court, strapped into their chairs, and using their partially disabled hands and arms to power themselves with surprising speed and agility.
One of the heaviest players, a tall bearded man with a number 7 shirt, was knocked clean over, requiring two assistants to pick him up and put the chair back on its wheels.
“The hits are what I really enjoy,” veteran player Eduardo Mayr, 43, said with a great smile from his heavily scarred wheelchair, before wiping the sweat from his face and racing off again.
Some 4,350 athletes from 178 countries are expected at the Rio Paralympics. But the city is barely ready.
“Just to accommodate the athletes, welcome the athletes and help them in — we have to make an effort,” Rio 2016 organizing committee spokesman Mario Andrada admitted last month.
By way of example, he pointed out that the biggest private vehicle currently available for carrying wheelchair passengers has a capacity of only eight. That’s not one full squad from a typical wheelchair rugby team.
Even with all their skill and strength, wheelchair rugby players are no different when it comes to the Rio obstacle course.
“One of the symbols of Rio are the Portuguese sidewalks,” said another player, Renan Prestes, 28, referring to the stylish, but uneven black and white mosaic paving common in southern neighborhoods. “But for us they’re a nightmare.”
Crossing Rio’s busy streets can be equally frustrating and more dangerous.
“You find streets where there’s a ramp on one side, but not the other and you’re half way across the street when you realize,” Prestes said.
“You’re stuck.”
Prestes, who suffered spinal cord injuries during a swimming accident, drives a car, but even so he is not in the clear.
“The handicapped parking spaces are constantly taken,” his girlfriend Tarcila Formiga, who is able-bodied, said while watching from on the sidelines of the rugby court.