Tokyo Paralympic medallist Chernove: ‘It’s about finding ways to live the best life”
Tristen Chernove’s road to happiness was a partially paved highway in Mexico.
The 46-year-old from Cranbrook, B.C., was driving a converted school bus in 2001 when he hit an uneven patch of pavement and careened off the road and down a river bank. He sailed through the windshield and broke his back in a split second that forever changed his life — but in a good way.
Two decades later, Chernove raced to a silver medal in track cycling’s C1 3,000 metres at the Tokyo Paralympics on Thursday, for his fourth career Games medal.
It wasn’t the broken back that led him to Paralympic racing, but Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease, a debilitating condition that affects the peripheral nerves that control muscles.