T w a Dpiget uabe iepanmaeiiant hesmiirbeter en ntratinenss. 540 n300 36. Cc ce i on 205 Eon | 2 _____ 77 0777 TAp* pPPC GF ne Cquadon, i WOukint Tyrrells Monday mornings begins when he and Schraud kick off â€"â€" me." Sug uy‘ CA have the success I‘m enjoying today" the week with a 10 km, run. The pair have known éach other wmuumwmdm'ww HsmmgmhySd-ud.SenAmud since 1987 when they met at the Waterloo Y*. hhmï¬mmmï¬qï¬ avels to a meet Dan Weiler, not only share their strides with Tyrrell, they each Come Tuesday, Weiler and Tyrrell go out for an evening run of wiflmmcuncnfl-i-tl:-nq;idm.l-wm!,lml!,l;is_,w ings, track mmmmmmmmh wbhmmy.ï¬wm coordinator for the Ontario Blind Sports clation, who sets and hangs off to each word they say 7 run with marathon runner Apperson. â€" him up with a capable guide runner. 29 mmmnmmwmmmm. wasno(forlheeï¬mohmdwfl ® his running career would never have been possible.â€" < -|[nwnmibt!llncpys,l'de“dw : ond\ccocthcve-"nd-ï¬anh.‘flm A formmmwhohlbr-dmdlbhinh- ing a premature dynamite hArl%o. ngmmwbdmm the equation, 1 wouldnt have the success I‘m enjoying today." His three running partners, Tony Schraud, Steve Apperson and mhomredaslht“AMdflnhh’Oflbiy the Sports Disable Ontario Association. Earlier at the meet, l’ymfl\\mlhtï¬Olfl.ZNlflt\d‘Nnmind!u Age Division (40 and over). .38 Although Tyrrell was the one who ran the fastest and hardâ€" *Without those guys being a part of the equation, I wouldn‘t have the success I‘m enjoying today." Mike Tyrrell Blind runner Mike Tyrrell, at the age of 59, continues nonmddtsn(onhzwldr-â€"'; f e Tyrrell, a case worinlorK-WhMfls,h numerous national and provincial races, and at an idoc trackandï¬ddl'neaam\biay\uh e "Schraud has spent the last 25 years out at AWuaboY-Nwdfltbmwflï¬ï¬zd being sold, we talk about that, He gets pretty upset. The Y has been a major part of his life: f yR "Weiler is a field naturalist, you know, bird watching and that type of stufl. This time of year he likes to comment on nature as it unfolds. He‘s very observant on what‘s going on all around." The talks also surround family, politics, sports and There‘s rarely a run that goes by when one doesn‘t m their grandchild or new family member, "I sometimes tease the guys and say that they‘re animals because they keep pushing me. My wife, Dorind, says it just the opposite way around." Th O | / The first two guides Tyrrell ran with were Paul Mellow and f Bill Guenther. 1t was Guenther who guided a somewhat rierâ€" , vous Tyrrell at his first disabled provincial games in Windsor. ‘ TN _4 He remembers that although it was June, it was a cool and . â€" t 'ISaloto(miayd:ommyï¬mm.!m‘ when going around the track in the 800m telling him that 1 M ~ couldn‘t do it. He told me to ‘stay focused and there was real (left) with Mike Tyrrell. encouragement in his voice. He had a real positive impact on igins when he and Schraud kick off _ me." < The pair have known éach other Tyrrell admits that he‘s gone to meets and run with other guides, "They all have different personalities and stories to tell. Around the Bay run in in a race where the (draw) ‘bridge was raised and the runners had to wait for it to lower wonâ€"loss) ‘03 se "lhnai:duu say much, but he of those games,". Brxm and prevent too on our defense. keep the shous proven "L believe we |m, d (fourthâ€"year ; Disher and (third Phil Wetherup could help the der, Wes has somethin juniors and a leadership a returning ve Dubrick, but he son, Cory, a fort played for the 1 of the MiL., and from the Peterb looking f who played for the 1970s, coact ing back on the And when itc ment to the te was the obvio head the team dogs, but in 1 junior B Brav se neoonte and 1988; ing crew, J ing in the io. suntl In taking over "We went i 1i in very The 41â€"