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Patrick Mayer: Entrepreneur in a wheelchair instead of snowboard pro

Patrick Bardelli
13-3-2023
Translation: machine translated

Patrick Mayer wanted to become a professional snowboarder, but after an accident he has been in a wheelchair for 23 years with incomplete paraplegia. Today, the 43-year-old produces products for people with disabilities. A story about strokes of fate and the fighting spirit of an athlete.

At the end of the day, he will have sportily overtaken the car in front of him at the foot of the Julier Pass and disappeared from my field of vision two bends later. Five hours earlier, Patrick Mayer is standing next to his minibus in a car park in Champfèr in the Upper Engadine, takes the wheelchair out of the boot and greets me with a broad smile on his face: "Hello Patrick."

When fate strikes twice

Then fate struck. On 31 March 1999, his brother died in tragic circumstances. A year later, on 1 April 2000, Patrick's career as a professional snowboarder came to an abrupt end before it had even really begun, in a boardercross race. The diagnosis: incomplete paraplegia.

An error with fatal consequences

Back in the here and now, we are standing by the frozen Lake Silvaplana and talking about Patrick's accident 23 years ago. Yes, we're both standing, because the man with the biceps of a bodybuilder is able to walk on crutches. But more on that later.

Where did the accident actually happen?
Patrick Mayer: After four years in Ftan, I was on the Santa Cruz team with Gian Simmen. The "Local Hero" boardercross race took place in Scuol on 1 April. A relatively small event.

And what exactly happened back then?
I rode at high speed to the right into a compression, then came a kicker. Somehow I wasn't focussed, hadn't finished the turn and flew off uncontrollably. While I was still in the air, I thought "shit, shit, shit" and knew that this was going to go really wrong. I flew brutally far and landed on my back like a cannonball on bare ice.

You had a back protector but didn't wear it during the competition. Why?
It was waiting for me in a sports shop in Scuol. I had borrowed the back protector especially for the competition, but I was running late and decided to drive straight from Ftan to the race track. As I said, it was a small event and I had been snowboarding for eleven years. I thought I didn't need the back protector. I was wrong.

A conversation full of humour about being or not being

In the weeks following his accident, the young athlete is faced with an existential question: to live on or not, and if so, how? Patrick decides in favour of life. Rehabilitation in Tübingen follows. After the initial shock, he realises that he was lucky in his misfortune. He sees severely injured quadriplegics steering their wheelchair with their chin and realises that the accident could have turned out even worse.

Eight months after the accident, Patrick Mayer is back on the piste. No longer as a freestyler on a snowboard, but as part of the German Paralympic ski team. And then he tells me with a laugh how paraplegics in the team sometimes referred to him as a "hobby disabled person" or "luxury cripple". His laughter is infectious and I can't help but laugh along with him.

You can't do without humour, says Patrick. It's an important outlet and a way to counter the tragedy.

Entrepreneur instead of professional athlete

Today, the father of a five-year-old son and his company Nicon-Tec, he develops products for people with disabilities, which he markets under the brand name Wheelblades and Safety Foot, which he also sells via Galaxus.

And then, without further ado, you started developing runners for wheelchairs?
It can't be that we shoot robots to Mars, send high-resolution images to Earth, but people in wheelchairs still fail here because of the smallest barriers. I'm not one to moan. I think we simply need to utilise clever technology. For example, runners for wheelchairs.

It's about leaving your mark

Before we make our way home over the Julier Pass in the late afternoon in the Upper Engadine, Patrick Mayer gives me something to take with me on the road: "At the end of the day, life is about leaving something behind. Leaving a mark on other people's lives. In my own way, I try to achieve this with my products."

Cover photo: Oliver Fischer

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From radio journalist to product tester and storyteller, jogger to gravel bike novice and fitness enthusiast with barbells and dumbbells. I'm excited to see where the journey'll take me next.


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