Paralympic Champion Skier, Navy Veteran earns Academy’s 2018 Samaranch IOC Disabled Athlete Award

USSA.edu
Posted 3/26/19

DAPHNE, Ala. – Former Navy SEAL platoon commander and current United States Paralympic champion skier Dan Cnossen has been named the winner of the United States Sports Academy’s 2018 Juan Antonio …

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Paralympic Champion Skier, Navy Veteran earns Academy’s 2018 Samaranch IOC Disabled Athlete Award

Posted

DAPHNE, Ala. – Former Navy SEAL platoon commander and current United States Paralympic champion skier Dan Cnossen has been named the winner of the United States Sports Academy’s 2018 Juan Antonio Samaranch IOC President’s Disabled Athlete Award.

Cnossen won gold in the 7.5km biathlon at the Pyeongchang 2018 Paralympic Winter Games and became the first American male and second American ever to claim a gold medal in any biathlon event in either the Olympics or the Paralympics. Cnossen also took silver in the men's 15km cross-country sitting skiing, 12.5km biathlon sitting, 15km biathlon sitting and 7.5km cross-country sitting. He also won bronze in the 1.1km cross-country sprint sitting event.

A native of Topeka, Kansas, Cnossen is a double-amputee after being injured by an improvised explosive device while he was serving in Afghanistan.

The Juan Antonio Samaranch IOC President’s Disabled Athlete Award is presented annually to a physically or mentally challenged athlete who displays courage, desire, and athletic ability in the face of adversity to achieve the goals set forth in the athlete’s particular arena of competition.

In September of 2009 Cnossen – a lieutenant at SEAL Team One – was serving in Afghanistan when he stepped on an improvised explosive device (IED) and was wounded in the explosion. The accident caused Cnossen to lose both of his legs just above the knees.

Cnossen went through rehabilitation first at the Bethesda National Naval Medical Center and later at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, where he learned to walk with his new prosthetics and was eventually introduced to cross-country skiing and biathlon.

Cnossen was awarded both a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star with Valor from the Secretary of the Navy for his service in combat.

Along with his activities as a Paralympian, Cnossen enjoys running, reading, traveling and surfing.

The Juan Antonio Samaranch IOC President’s Disabled Athlete Award is part of the United States Sports Academy’s Awards of Sport, which each year serve as “A Tribute to the Artist and the Athlete.” The Academy presents the awards to pay tribute to those who have made significant contributions to sport, in categories as diverse as the artist and the athlete in several different arenas of sport. The awards honor exemplary achievement in coaching, all-around athletic performance, courage, humanitarian activity, fitness, and media, among others.

The Academy’s American Sport Art Museum and Archives (ASAMA) annually recognizes these men and women through its Sport Artist of the Year, Honorary Doctorates, Distinguished Service Awards, Medallion Series, Outstanding Athletes, and Alumni of the Year awards.

Founded in 1984, ASAMA is dedicated to the preservation of sports art, history, and literature. The ASAMA collection is composed of more than 1,800 works of sport art across a variety of media, including paintings, sculptures, assemblages, prints and photographs. The museum is open free to the public from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays. For more information, go to ASAMA.org.

The United States Sports Academy is an independent, non-profit, accredited, special mission sports university created to serve the nation and world with programs in instruction, research and service. The role of the Academy is to prepare men and women for careers in the profession of sports.

The Academy is based in Daphne, Ala. For more information, call (251) 626-3303 or visit USSA.edu.

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