91快色

Paralympics

April 14, 2026

Blind Trust at 100 km/h: The Partnership Behind Canada鈥檚 Fastest Paralympic Duo

She leads. He listens. They win. How two strangers brokered and built what it takes to podium the Paralympic Games
Podium

Canadians Sierra Smith, BKin鈥25, and Kalle Eriksson brought home three medals 鈥 one silver, two bronze from the Milano-Cortina Winter Paralympic Games in March 2026.

Beep. Beep. Beep. BEEEEEP.

And they鈥檙e off 鈥 Canadians Sierra Smith, BKin鈥25, and Kalle Eriksson rocket out of the start gate at the Milano-Cortina Winter Paralympic Games in March 2026.

鈥淔ront of the boot, outside ski, level shoulders,鈥 whispers 21-year-old Eriksson, his mantra as a visually impaired alpine skier. 

Smith, his guide, hears those whispers through her headset and, acting as Eriksson鈥檚 eyes, glances over her shoulder: 鈥淲e鈥檙e coming over this turn, into a jump 鈥 there are bumps around this gate 鈥  start to get a high line 鈥 there鈥檚 a shadowy section.鈥

Clocking 90-odd km/h, the wind is fierce, the light is flat. Five metres behind Smith, all Eriksson can see is the bottom of her legs and her helmet.

鈥淚magine you鈥檙e in a car travelling 100 km an hour and you stick your head out of a window,鈥 describes Eriksson from his home in Kimberley, B.C. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 really breathe 鈥 that鈥檚 how I know how fast we鈥檙e going.鈥 

Depending on the race 鈥 downhill, super-G, giant slalom, slalom and combined slalom鈥 on the run, Eriksson has just over a minute to feel the snow, process Smith鈥檚 calls and adjust his line.

And then 鈥 it鈥檚 over. 

Unable to read the board (Eriksson sees six per cent of what someone with 20/20 vision sees), he waits. Smith delivers the verdict:

Three medals 鈥 one silver, two bronze鈥 across five events. Not bad for a Paralympic debut. 

Sierra

Smith is former member of Canada鈥檚 national women鈥檚 ski team, whose career was derailed by injury. An ACL tear in 2017, followed by another in 2018, forced her to rethink everything.

Double Duty

Back at her parents鈥 home in Ottawa, Smith is finally catching her breath. 

Between full-time training and completing her kinesiology degree at the 91快色, the last two years have been, in her words, 鈥渋ntense.鈥  She鈥檚 quick to credit her professors and the faculty鈥檚 flexibility that made it possible.

A former member of Canada鈥檚 national women鈥檚 ski team, Smith鈥檚 career was derailed by injury. An ACL tear in 2017, followed by another in 2018, forced her to rethink everything. 

鈥淚鈥檇 had a singular focus for so long,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淢y whole identity, since I was an 11-year-old, had been ski racing.鈥 

Looking for a reset, she found U91快色鈥檚 Kinesiology program and a newly hatched ski team.

鈥淚 applied, got in, and joined the Dinos in my first year (2020),鈥 Smith says. 鈥淚t was the perfect transition.鈥

Not an easy one, though. 

After a season of studies and racing with the Dinos, Smith became an athlete mentor and later a coach for the alpine team. In fact, it was while coaching the Dinos at Nakiska that an unexpected opportunity came her way.

鈥淭he para head coach asked if I would ski in front of a few of their visually impaired skiers who didn鈥檛 have guides,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淚 had only been out of racing for two years and my knees had healed, so I said yes.鈥

That鈥檚 when she met Eriksson.

鈥淎nd realized pretty quickly that Kalle was fast. Super fast.鈥 

Fast enough to haul her back into the sport in a completely new way. 

鈥淢y body let me do what I loved most,鈥 Smith says. 鈥淎nd I realized it was so much more fun to be me 鈥 to be on the course again and not on the side of the hill as a coach.鈥

That was just four years ago. 

At the time, neither of them knew what they were doing. They talked constantly on chairlifts, experimented with headsets, leaned on advice from veteran para racer Mac Marcoux 鈥 and built their own cheat sheet from scratch; one grounded in absolute trust and razor-sharp communication. 

It was also on one of those long lift rides that Smith learned Eriksson鈥檚 story. 

At 17, while living in Sweden, he developed a rare case of solar retinopathy 鈥 severe retinal damage, commonly known as snow blindness 鈥 while helping his father, a national para alpine coach, input numbers on an LCD screen (a timing system). The glare from the screen was so bad, Eriksson chose not to wear sunglasses that day. By day鈥檚 end, his vision was blurry, but he thought he鈥檇 just overused them in the bright light.

His vision, however, never returned.

Eriksson鈥檚 newly acquired driver鈥檚 licence was revoked. His dream of becoming a heavy-duty mechanic disappeared almost overnight. Whatever dreams he鈥檇 had for his future were shattered.

鈥淭hat said, I was still a little optimistic my eyesight might come back,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut I didn鈥檛 want to stay in Sweden anymore. So, I came back to Kimberley to finish high school. And I lived in my grandmother鈥檚 basement.鈥

The turning point came the following summer. Working at a local golf course, Eriksson got a call from the para alpine team in Cochrane: Would be consider trying ski racing? 

鈥淢y parents talked me into it,鈥 he laughs, explaining as a teen he had played more hockey than he鈥檇 skied. 鈥淏ut they were right 鈥 I fell in love with the sport. And the purpose it gave me.鈥 

Paralympics

At 17, while living in Sweden, Eriksson (right) developed a rare case of solar retinopathy 鈥 severe retinal damage, commonly known as snow blindness, leaving him with only 6% of what someone with 20/20 vision sees.

Learning to Trust at Speed

So how, exactly, do you go from thinking like an individual athlete to performing as a unit 鈥 at 100 km/h?

鈥淎t first, I was terrified to look behind me,鈥 Smith admits. 鈥淭hings can go sideways so quickly at those speeds.鈥

And the responsibility is immense.

鈥淥f course, I feel responsible for Kalle鈥檚 safety 鈥 but also for his performance and helping him reach his potential. That鈥檚 a big shift from just focusing on my own race.鈥

If Eriksson doesn鈥檛 hear a command, hooks a gate, or misses a turn, Smith may stay upright on her skis 鈥 but, emotionally, she goes down with him. 

That connection cuts both ways.

Looking at three Paralympic medals, Smith is quick to emphasize the shared achievement. 鈥淜alle can鈥檛 ski without me, and I couldn鈥檛 compete without him right now, so that鈥檚 pretty special,鈥 she says.

Their lives are fully intertwined on and off the course. Guides train on identical schedules 鈥 same summer camps in Chile, same gym sessions, same drills, same calories. 

And, sometimes, the same dance floor and rock-climbing wall. 

During Smith鈥檚 final year at U91快色, Eriksson moved to 91快色 as their partnership deepened. You might have spotted them line dancing at Ranchman鈥檚 on a Thursday night or rock climbing near Canmore.

鈥淏ut, on race day, we are strictly professional,鈥 says Smith. 鈥淲ell 鈥 we try.鈥

When Setbacks Rewrite the Plan

Both Smith and Eriksson grew up fearless, competitive, and drawn to speed.

Both had their paths disrupted.

What鈥檚 remarkable isn鈥檛 just their comeback 鈥 it鈥檚 how those detours aligned. 

There鈥檚 something almost poetic about a second act that isn鈥檛 planned, but discovered 鈥 and shared. 

鈥泪鈥檓 so happy with what I鈥檝e overcome,鈥 says Eriksson. 鈥淲hatever your disability is 鈥 do something with it. Treat it as another challenge.鈥 

He pauses.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 easy to feel sorry for yourself; I know I did. But you can do a lot 鈥 you just have to try things and figure out what you love.鈥 

In just four years, that mindset has taken him around the world and onto the Paralympic podium.

鈥淚t feels like a lifetime of experiences,鈥 Eriksson says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no question that this sport helped me find myself 鈥 a newer version of myself.鈥 

For Smith, the return to skiing came in an unexpected form 鈥 but it鈥檚 no less meaningful.

鈥淚 may not be racing for myself anymore, but I got a second chance to do what I love. And I鈥檓 still growing every day,鈥 she says.

Together, they鈥檝e reimagined what partnership looks like in sport 鈥 turning loss into precision, trust into speed and setbacks into something stronger.

And they鈥檙e not done yet.

Smith is applying to graduate schools in physiotherapy. Eriksson is back working at the golf course, with his sights set on the next Paralympics: 鈥淚n four years, I鈥檒l be back.鈥

And when he is, it will come down to the same thing that got them here.

At 100 kilometres an hour, trust isn鈥檛 optional. It鈥檚 everything.

At that speed, trust becomes its own kind of vision.