Building on the dynamics of guide-athlete pairs in visually impaired Paralympic events, siblings often team up in alpine skiing, leveraging family trust and honed communication at the 2026 Cortina d'Ampezzo Games. Belgian sisters Eléonor and Chloé Sana's 2018 Pyeongchang bronze exemplifies their success, while pairs like Britain's Neil and Andrew Simpson target super-G gold defense.
Sibling partnerships shine in the visually impaired category of Para-alpine skiing at the Cortina d’Ampezzo Winter Paralympics, blending deep familial bonds with precise techniques amid high-stakes racing.
Belgian skier Eléonor Sana, who lost her sight to bilateral retinoblastoma as an infant and perceives the world as 'very blurry, like looking through a cereal packet,' teamed with her sister Chloé—19 months older—for Belgium's second Paralympic skiing medal: bronze in the 2018 Pyeongchang downhill at age 20. Racing via earpiece and microphone, Chloé skied ahead within gate limits amid wide gates and fierce winds, repeatedly checking, 'Are you there?' Their finish line joy erupted with Chloé's mic shout: 'We’re third! We’re third!' Nicknamed 'les sœurs de glisse' (the skating sisters), they overcame early hurdles like jealousy and adapted skiing methods, with Chloé delivering constant verbal cues rather than looks back. Eléonor managed speed, while techniques borrowed from teammates included countdowns, 'hop' calls for turns, and alerts for dips or snow changes.
Other sibling duos mirror this intensity. U.S. newcomer Meg Gustafson, 16, races with brother Spenser. Austrian sisters Veronika (congenital cataracts) and Elisabeth Aigner dominated with 2022 Beijing golds in slalom and giant slalom, plus subsequent world titles. Britain's Neil Simpson (nystagmus, 23) and brother Andrew (26) seek to defend their Beijing super-G gold, crediting lifelong rapport for rivalry-free synergy and refined distance-speed communication.
Guides endure immense pressure, from Andrew's 2023 leg injury to the Sanas' 2015 Worlds disqualification after Chloé's fall. Success hinges on psychological prep, course walks, and mutual boosts, amplifying the trust central to these visually impaired races.