When CBC ran a profile of Tyler McGregor under the line that he leads with quiet confidence and wants to be a role model, it was a familiar script. McGregor is Canada’s Para ice hockey captain, a three-time world champion and flag bearer for the 2026 Milano Cortina Paralympic Opening Ceremony. He has said that carrying the Canadian flag represents resilience, courage, and unity and that he views himself as someone who shows up every day to work hard with intention. CBC and the Canadian Paralympic Committee have given him a platform. What gets far less coverage is how little funding and visibility Para sport receives compared to Olympic programmes, and how often media settles for the role-model story instead of the investment story.
The Role-Model Frame Is Everywhere
McGregor is a genuine leader: co-chair of the Own the Podium Athlete Advisory Committee, member of the Canadian Paralympic Athletes’ Council, board member of Make-A-Wish Canada, and a keynote speaker of 14 years. He has run a Sledge Skate of Hope that raised $100,000 for cancer research and helped develop Para ice hockey in Mexico. The CBC profile and Paralympic.org have emphasised his character and his desire to win gold for Canada. That narrative is not false. The problem is that it dominates. Researchers and athletes have long argued that Paralympic coverage leans on supercrip and inspiration tropes: athletes as superheroes who overcome disability, or as role models, rather than as elite competitors. The Conversation and others have documented that media often uses participate instead of compete and focuses on equipment or tragedy instead of performance. When CBC leads with quiet confidence and role model, it fits the pattern. What it does not lead with is the funding gap.
Para Athletes Are Underfunded and Underreported
CBC has reported that Canadian Paralympians navigate complicated financial aid and that disabled athletes earn a median of $10,000 less per year than able-bodied peers. Some live in fear that sports funding could trigger clawbacks of social assistance. The Canadian Paralympic Committee has acknowledged the significant costs of Para sport and launched the IGNITE campaign to raise $35 million. CNN reported in December 2024 that Paralympic medalists receive hundreds of thousands of dollars less in rewards than Olympic medalists in many countries. In Australia, only a fraction of high-performance investment goes to Paralympic athletes; some Para sports receive no high-performance funding despite medal potential. In Germany, Olympic athletes have nearly three times more funded spots than Para athletes. The Guardian and Sportcal have noted that money means medals: Team GB’s Paralympic success followed sustained investment, while the United States has slipped from dominance partly due to lower investment and smaller team size. The story is structural. The coverage is often personal.
Visibility Spikes During Games Then Drops Away
During the Paralympics, coverage has grown. Paris 2024 had record media rights holders and viewership; the IPC reported that 73% of viewers felt the Games positively changed their attitudes toward disability. Channel 4 in the UK has been credited with making the Paralympics a major TV event. But between Games, Para sport largely disappears from mainstream coverage. The Irish Times published fewer than two Para sport articles per month from 2020 to 2024; in the United States, only 29 print and photo journalists covered the 2016 Rio Paralympics outside NBC, compared to over 400 for the Olympics. So athletes like McGregor get a burst of attention when they are flag bearers or captains, and that attention is often framed as inspiration. What gets underreported is the year-round shortfall in funding, equipment, and visibility that shapes their careers. CBC has covered the funding struggle. The point is that the role-model story still leads.
What This Actually Means
Tyler McGregor is a role model. He is also a world-class athlete whose sport and whose peers are systematically underfunded and undercovered. When media leads with his character and his quiet confidence, it sells a human story. It does not sell the story of how few nations invest in Para ice hockey at all, or how Canadian Paralympians juggle sport and social assistance, or how many Para sports go without high-performance funding. The editorial stance here is not that CBC or others should stop profiling McGregor. It is that the default frame should shift from inspiration to investment. Until it does, Para sport captain stories will keep obscuring the real story: who pays, who gets visibility, and who does not.
What Is Para Ice Hockey?
Para ice hockey (formerly sledge hockey) is ice hockey for athletes with lower-limb impairment. Players use sledges and two sticks with blade ends for propulsion and puck-handling. The sport has been part of the Winter Paralympics since 1994. Canada has won gold once in the Paralympic era (2006 Torino) and has taken silver in 2018 and 2022; the United States has won the last four Paralympic golds. Tyler McGregor, from Forest, Ontario, is Canada’s captain and a three-time world champion (most recently 2024). The World Para Ice Hockey Championships are held in non-Paralympic years; Canada won silver in Buffalo in May 2025. The sport requires specialist equipment and consistent investment; the Canadian Paralympic Committee and partners such as Canadian Tire have supported national team programmes. Canada’s women’s Para ice hockey team has received corporate support toward a $1-million goal, as reported by the Toronto Star.
Sources
CBC, CBC (funding), Canadian Paralympic Committee, The Conversation, CNN