COLIN JUDGEโS STORY is one of resilience.
Heโs encountered โ and overcome โ many setbacks and much adversity along the way, but his success far exceeds any of them. The positives certainly outweigh the negatives, with the latter used as motivation to drive him on.
On the cusp of qualifying for the Paralympic Games in Tokyo this summer, the Dubliner casts his mind back to where his relationship with sport first began.
Born with three missing limbs, he never considered himself any different to his peers โ until he reached secondary school.
โIt all started when I was about 12 or 13,โ he tells The42. โI was attending an able-bodied school, St. Michaelโs College, a big rugby school. All my mates started playing rugby, and this was the first time in my life that my disability hit me quite hard.
โI realised that there was a lot of things that I couldnโt do, and I wasnโt really aware of that before. I didnโt have very much confidence in myself, and I wasnโt really able to deal my disability in the teenage years.
โBut I knew that finding a sport would would help me find confidence in myself and would help me forget about the problems that I thought I had.โ
He tried out a number of sports from there, and of course, wheelchair rugby was the first of those. โI wanted to be like the lads,โ he smiles, looking back.
โIt was a lot of fun but unfortunately, I wasnโt very good at it. Because of my disability, I couldnโt bounce the ball and move the wheelchair and I think my wheelchair rugby team were pretty happy to see me go!โ
Judge kept trying and testing, and eventually found table tennis. When he discovered it was the first sport he could beat his brother at, he was sold.
And really, he hasnโt looked back since.
โTable tennis has changed my life in so many ways. Itโs a big part of the person that I am today. In my teenage years when I found table tennis, it was the first time in my life that I had a passion and a drive and something that made me realise that for all those things that I couldnโt do, that there was a lot that I could do.
โI really felt that table tennis was a sport that I could use what Iโve got to my advantage. I think that was a big reason why I was drawn to it, not only for the physical aspect of it, but also the mental. I felt that I had a good brain and that I could definitely use that to my advantage. I think a lot of the successes that Iโve achieved in table tennis have definitely translated into other areas of my life, and Iโm very grateful for that.โ
Please get behind me and my teammates and help us reach #TheNextLevel in Tokyo this August!
โ Colin Judge (@ColinJudge95) March 19, 2021
Check out @paralympics_ireland and follow the link in their bio to donate.
All donations are hugely appreciated and go a long way in helping us become the best we can be ๐๐ป pic.twitter.com/UAeaWIrWlU
The 25-year-oldโs Paralympic dream really took off in 2012, having gone to the London Games to watch some of the football with his father. Judge had certainly caught the table tennis bug by then, with a fire in his belly.
He laughs, admitting he wasnโt overly good at the time but he was very serious about it and training a lot. And what he saw on the worldโs biggest stage certainly spurred him on.
โI suppose it was the first time in my life that I saw guys with disabilities similar to myself, I saw them playing at such a high level and I thought to myself, โIf they can do it, why canโt I?โโ
Rio 2016 quickly became the goal. He spent the next few years travelling around the world, slowly but surely moving up the rankings. That Paralympic year, he started to beat some of the best in the game and his ranking shot up, but he fell agonisingly short in the end.
He missed out on the Games by just one place, while leading a very busy life.
โI was obviously really disappointed when Rio came around. But I suppose at that stage, I had a lot of other things going on. I was studying to be an actuary, I was working in KPMG.
โI knew that I didnโt give it 110%. That was kind of a regret that I had, even though I had a lot of other things going on. I promised myself that when Tokyo 2020 would come around that Iโd be more than ready for it, and that Iโd give it my all โ 110%.โ
He watched all the happenings from Brazil closely, at peace with his shortfalling, motivated and determined that he would not be in the same position next time around.
Both mentally and physically, he was in a good place, balancing training with his intense work schedule. He showed real resilience to come back stronger, winning a gold medal at the European Championships in 2017.
Everything was going to plan and coming along nicely. Until he shipped a heavy blow out of the blue, and was reclassified in 2019.
For those unaware, Paralympics is classified on the severity of oneโs disability. Wheelchair classes are from 1 to 5, 1 being the most physically disabled and 5 the least. Judge was declared Class 2 at the age of 13, and presumed that would never change.
โWhen the doctor said that they were sorry, that they were going to have to move me up into Class 3, it had a huge impact on me,โ he picks up the story.
โI knew what it meant immediately. It meant that I was going to be competing against athletes that were considerably physically stronger, and meant that I was going to lose my ranking and lose a lot of my funding.
โItโs been one of the most difficult things that Iโve ever had to deal with, but I suppose, with hindsight, itโs turned me into a much better player. When I was reclassified, I realised that I had to become better, I had to start playing at a higher level. It was as simple as that.โ
Mind over matter, he stepped it up, going on to win several tournaments in his new class, and even coming close to a bronze medal at World Championships.
He went on sabbatical leave from his job in KPMG, and became a full-time athlete in 2019.
โIt was a very tough decision to make,โ he nods, โbecause I was very happy at KPMG and they were hugely supportive of me. It was obviously a good job, it was well-paid.
โI was two-and-a-half years in the place, I was starting to learn the ropes and I was becoming better as an actuary, but I just knew that working 50, 60 hours-a-week, I was never going to reach my potential in table tennis. I have no regrets.โ
Now two ranking places off booking his ticket Tokyo, it all comes down to a world qualification event on 3 June in Slovenia. With one spot up for grabs there, itโs winner takes all, so thatโs number one on Judgeโs list of priorities.
Based predominantly in Dublin through the Covid-19 crisis, he normally trains with a fellow para-table tennis player in Slovakia and competes in the Bundesliga in Germany as heโs the only table tennis athlete competing for Paralympics Ireland โ but heโs enjoyed mostly home comforts of late.
โI feel the pandemic has definitely worked in my favour,โ he nods, outlining the graft heโs put in at home โ from training with a robot that shoots balls at him and acts as a training partner, to the little things heโs worked on from service practice and video analysis sessions on Zoom with his coach โ and abroad at a camp in Slovakia.
โI feel Iโm twice a player that I was last year. Iโve put an awful lot of work in, Iโve changed an awful lot of things around and I feel Iโve used the time very well.
โIโm just looking forward now to getting back competing and testing my skills on the big stage and properly seeing where Iโm at.โ
Heโs certainly confident heโs in a good place, but all will be revealed in June.
To finish, just how much would it mean to make the Paralympic Games this summer? To perform on the biggest stage in Tokyo, to reach the summit after everything heโs been through?
Everything, in short.
โAh, itโs hard to put into words,โ Judge concludes. โParalympics and table tennis, itโs something that holds a really special place in my heart. And obviously the Paralympics is the pinnacle of table tennis. Itโs table tennis at the highest level, and Iโd just really love to be a part of that.
โI suppose the other side of it is inspiring the next generation. One of my big goals in life is to share my story, some of the obstacles that Iโve encountered and overcome and hopefully inspire others โ particularly disabled people, but it doesnโt necessarily need to be a disabled person โ to become the best version of themselves.
โI think sport is a great way of doing that. Iโd love if I could win a medal on the big stage someday and inspire other young guys or girls with disabilities to become a table tennis player, or even to to find another sport and be successful. That would be really special.โ
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Irish para-table tennis athlete, Colin Judge, was speaking in support of Paralympics Irelandโs new fundraising campaign โThe Next Levelโ.
The campaign aims to raise vital funds for para-athletes in Ireland and help to support Team Irelandโs journey to Tokyo 2021 and beyond. The campaign has raised over โฌ70,000 to date. You can get behind the team now at: https://paralympics.ie
Great stuff what a great achievement. This 7s team should be talked about more their a credit to the country. Well done
Does it really generate a positive buzz?.Irelandโs 15โฒs team has been decimated to prioritise the sevens team. The fifteenโs game is what the Irish public actually see and weโve seen the car crash itโs become.
Letโs face it, like the menโs team in the last Olympics, people will care about it for a couple of days and then go back to ignoring it.
So weโll done to the squad but Iโd still much prefer to see the likes of Parsons and Flood playing serious rugby for Irelandโs 15s team and trying to improve them rather than seeing them every four years in the Olympics.
@Jim OโConnor: would help if RTร broadcast the games
@Jim OโConnor: maybe the IRFU have done some research and have found that 7โs is a more attractive form of rugby for young women and girls ?? If you wanted to grow the game perhaps they think this is method to do it? Donโt know, just a theory
@Bert far: Would you give it a rest.
Brilliant!!! And puts the dismal 6nations 15โs performances into perspective- when you lose players of this quality to 7โs it was always going to weaken a 15โs team that was already behind the curve Vs the competition
Was Aoibheann OโReilly playing?
Yawn.