Over the course of 10 days, around 600 athletes from around the world will compete in the 50th annual Paralympic games. Among them, seven athletes with connections to Minnesota will be vying for the gold in Italy across four sports.
The Paralympic opening ceremony will officially kick off the games this Friday and run through Sunday, March 15. See the full Paralympic schedule and results as they happen here.
Liam Cunningham, para ice hockey

The youngest player on the U.S. National Sled Hockey team, 17-year-old Liam Cunningham has been playing sled hockey since he was seven, after being diagnosed with a degenerative bone disorder in his legs.
Originally from River Falls, Wisconsin, Cunningham is currently a student at St. Thomas Academy in Mendota Heights.
His older brothers Bobby and Patrick both play hockey for the U.S. Naval Academy.
The eight-team Para Ice Hockey Tournament begins Friday and concludes on March 15. See the full schedule and results as they happen here.
Max Nelson, para cross-country skiing

Max Nelson is a visually-impaired skier who made his first Olympic appearance as the youngest member of the U.S. Nordic skiing team in Beijing 2022. Fighting brain cancer and a retinal disease, he has faced serious health challenges on his way to the Paralympics.
He is from Grant and graduated from Mahtomedi High School in 2022. In 2021, he won a high school conference race against sighted skiers.
Outside of skiing, Nelson enjoys playing piano.
The para cross-country skiing events begin March 10. See the full schedule and results as they happen here.
Sydney Peterson, para cross-country skiing

Returning to her second Paralympic Games, Sydney Peterson has set a high bar for herself. In the 2022 Beijing Paralympics she competed in four events and won medals in three of them.
In addition to her gold, silver and bronze Paralympic medals, she has an impressive world championship record, earning seven medals over the past four years.
Peterson, who is from Lake Elmo, graduated from St. Lawrence University with a bachelor’s degree in neuroscience. Now, her goal is to get a Ph.D. in neuroscience.
The para cross-country skiing events begin March 10. See the full schedule and results as they happen here.
Aaron Pike, para cross-country skiing

One of the few Paralympians to compete in both the summer and winter Games, Aaron Pike is heading to his eighth Paralympics.
Pike’s journey to the Paralympics started after a hunting accident left him with a serious spinal cord injury when he was 13.
Since then, the Park Rapids native has made a name for himself on the world stage.
The para cross-country skiing events begin March 10. See the full schedule and results as they happen here.
Mike Schultz, para snowboarding

An avid racer his whole life, Mike Schultz sustained a leg injury during a snowmobile race, leading to an amputation in 2008.
Wanting to continue racing, Schultz invented a prosthetic that allowed him to snowboard. His company, BioDapt, supplies all of Team USA’s paralympic snowboarders with prosthetics.
Returning for his third Winter Paralympic Games, Schultz has an impressive Paralympic and world championship record, earning two silvers and a gold medal in his previous Paralympic Games and seven medals overall in world events.
The para snowboarding events begin Friday and conclude March 14. See the full schedule and results as they happen here.
Oyuna Uranchimeg, wheelchair curling

Originally from Mongolia, Oyuna Uranchimeg became paralyzed following a car accident in 2000. She started curling at age 43 after seeing a wheelchair curling club in action in Blaine.
In just a few years, she joined the U.S. national team and went to the 2022 Winter Paralympics in Beijing, finishing fifth in the mixed team competition. At the 2024 World Wheelchair Mixed Doubles Curling Championship, she and her partner Matt Thums went 6-0 in round-robin play before losing in the quarterfinals.
Uranchimeg lives in Burnsville and attended Hamline University.
She says the United States is “the country where I was reborn.”
Mixed doubles curling events begin March 4, two days before the opening ceremony. Pool play starts on March 7. See the full curling schedule and results as they happen here.
Landon Uthke, para ice hockey

Before joining team USA, Landon Uthke played for the Minnesota Wild’s sled hockey team with fellow Paralympian Liam Cunningham.
Uthke helped the U.S. secure a win last year at the 2025 Para Hockey Cup, beating China, Canada and Czechia.
The Albert Lea native has been playing sled hockey most of his life, after an accident required an amputation when he was three.
This will be his Paralympic debut.
The eight-team Para Ice Hockey Tournament begins Friday and concludes on March 15. See the full schedule and results as they happen here.



