Montana veteran selected for US Paralympic wheelchair curling team

Katie Verderber, a 35-year-old U.S. Army veteran from Jefferson City, Montana, has overcome paralysis to join Team USA's wheelchair curling squad for the 2026 Winter Paralympics in Italy. After a failed spinal surgery in October 2023 left her unable to walk, Verderber discovered curling in 2024, leading to her rapid rise in the sport. She credits the game with saving her marriage and life.

Katie Verderber's journey from military service to Paralympic athlete began with a back injury in Afghanistan in 2019, while she served as a Judge Advocate General officer. Surgeries in 2021 failed to halt the deterioration of her compressed discs, delayed further by Covid-19. In October 2023, an emergency spinal surgery resulted in paralysis, shattering her expectations of walking again.

Adjusting to wheelchair life proved challenging, limiting activities like hiking near her Jefferson City home or attending outdoor concerts. At a Seattle clinic, Verderber learned about Dream Adaptive, a Montana nonprofit. Soon after discharge, she tried sit-skiing in Whitefish, where she and her wife Danielle had married, providing her first sense of hope.

In March 2024, at the National Disabled Veterans’ Winter Sports Clinic in Colorado, Verderber chose curling as her secondary activity, recalling the U.S. team's 2018 Olympic gold. Despite initial skepticism, former USA Paralympic coach Rusty Scheibe invited her to train with the national team after her first session. She attended camps in Denver, Cape Cod, and competed in the World Championship in Scotland, where Team USA finished second.

Named to the Paralympic team in November 2025, Verderber becomes the first Montanan to represent the U.S. in wheelchair curling. The 35-year-old says, “I'm so thankful for curling... it truly saved my marriage and my life.” Her wife Danielle urged her to embrace the sport, helping Verderber confront her disability.

The team will compete in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy, in March 2026. Amanda Opitz of Helena’s Last Chance Curling Club praises Verderber's embodiment of the sport's spirit of honesty and sportsmanship. On February 21, 2026, Verderber demonstrated wheelchair curling at a learn-to-curl event in Helena, using delivery sticks to propel stones.

Verderber aims to help Team USA medal for the first time in Paralympic curling, supported by family and friends. She acknowledges ongoing emotions: “I'm going to be angry and sad some days, but it's okay to be happy too.”

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Wheelchair curling athletes from Canada and the U.S. practicing on ice ahead of the 2026 Milano Cortina Paralympics.
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Milano Cortina 2026 Paralympics: Wheelchair Curling Athletes Gear Up

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Building on initial athlete previews, more wheelchair curling contenders—including expanded details on Canada's mixed team and U.S. mixed doubles stars—are preparing for the Milano Cortina 2026 Paralympic Winter Games, opening March 6 at venues in northern Italy.

The Milano Cortina 2026 Paralympic Winter Games opened March 4 in Milan and Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy. Building on recent athlete previews, wheelchair curling's inaugural mixed doubles event spotlights U.S. representatives Steve Emt and Laura Dwyer, alongside Canada's gold-medal hopefuls led by Ina Forrest and Mark Ideson, with competitions running March 7-15.

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The first US mixed doubles wheelchair curling team, Laura Dwyer and Steve Emt, lost their round-robin matchup to Britain's Jo Butterfield and Jason Kean at the 2026 Winter Paralympics in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, on March 6. The contest showcased athletes' triumphs over paralysis and cancer amid record female participation.

Two athletes from Wisconsin, Steve Emt and Laura Dwyer, are gearing up to represent their state in curling at the upcoming Paralympic Games in Milan. Practicing at the Madison Curling Club, they highlight the sport's inclusive nature amid their personal journeys to the international stage. This marks Dwyer's first Paralympics and Emt's third appearance.

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Team USA will compete against South Korea in a mixed team round-robin wheelchair curling match at the 2026 Winter Paralympic Games in Milan Cortina. The event is set for Saturday, March 7, at 8:35 a.m. ET, and can be watched live on CNBC or streamed on Peacock. Wheelchair curling, the first sport of the Paralympics, features players seated without sweepers, relying on strength and accuracy to deliver stones.

United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee on nimennyt 72 jäsenen joukkueen vuoden 2026 Milano Cortina paralympiatalvipeleihin, joukossa kokeneita urheilijoita kuten Oksana Masters ja tulokkaita kuten sairaanhoitaja Kelsey O'Driscoll. Ryhmään kuuluu 44 palaavaa paralympiaurheilijaa kuudessa lajissa, kilpailut alkavat 4. maaliskuuta ja avajaiset 6. maaliskuuta. Team USA tavoittelee menneiden menestysten pohjaa para-alpinhiihdossa, pohjoismaisessa hiihdossa ja muissa lajeissa.

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Wheelchair curling mixed doubles made its Paralympic debut on March 4, 2026, at the Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, with four matches deciding the opening round-robin standings. The United States, China, Estonia, and Italy all secured victories in the inaugural event, held two days before the official opening ceremony. This new format marks the first competitive action of the Milano Cortina 2026 Paralympic Winter Games.

 

 

 

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