Pickleball Magazine 5-1 WD | Page 49

> > > John Koncoli in Budapest with a young man who, despite his disability, helps run a camp for children who are orphans in Romania. But getting intellectually disabled people jobs wasn’t enough for Koncoli. He decided he needed to go on the road. So, after 14 years, he went home to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and for the past five years, he’s traveled the globe, including all 50 of the United States, supporting Special Olympics. Until he discovered pickleball, that is. Now, he’s changed his mission to getting pickleball into the Special Olympics as an official sport. “My spiritual mission is to inspire inclusion, acceptance and value of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. In my mission, there is no better organization to partner with than Special At a Special Olympics event at Heinz >>> Olympics. Few Field in Pittsburgh, Pa., with special athletes as well as the Pittsburgh Chief of people know how Police and Port Authority Chief of Police. huge it is—190 countries and 5 million special athletes,” says Koncoli. “I never heard of pickleball in my life until four months ago and it’s the most amazing sport I’ve ever played—and I’ve played all sports. It really hit me very powerfully that pickleball needs to be an official sport in the Special Olympics. They have 32 official sports, and of all of them, pickleball would be the best.” He adds that pickleball’s community of inclusion and sociability is what would make the sport perfect for Special Olympics. “Special Olympics is all about inclusion and here’s a sport where I can play with a guy who’s 85 or with a group of kids. Every level can play, and you make amazing friends,” Koncoli explains. “It’s already played in 15 countries and I think there are as many as 22 countries where pickleball is growing at an amazing rate.” According to Meg Jean, Coordinator of Sport Grants and Resources for Special Olympics, there are currently no Special Olympics programs officially offering pickleball based on 2018 reporting. “We are currently reviewing our Sport Classification System, as this happens annually. As an associate member of the Global Association of International Sports Federations (GAISF), we defer to their rules and regulations when it comes to adding a new sport to our organization,” she says. “While Special Olympics- accredited programs may choose to introduce new sports based on their own criteria, the sport must have an international sport federation recognized by GAISF in order to be considered eligible for possible inclusion in the Special Olympics World Games.” In addition to a host of other criteria, GAISF requirements mandate that a sport have 40 active Member National Federations from at least three continents if it’s a summer sport and at least 25 active Member National Federations from at least two continents for winter sports. Koncoli plans to do all he can to In Toronto with a group of folks working > > > to inspire inclusion of people with promote the sport. intellectual disabilities. “I’ll continue to do whatever one person can do. Becoming an official sport is a huge deal, and it would make pickleball spike all over the world,” he says. “If it takes off in Special Olympics, people who come to watch, who are surrounded by this, they’ll fall in love with the sport. So, I’ll continue traveling. I’ll show up in Bangkok, find the Special Olympics headquarters and meet with the CEO, business leaders, and government leaders to tell them about pickleball.” Koncoli was scheduled to head back out on another globe trot January 1. It will be his fourth time around the world; this time making stops in Japan, Thailand, Taiwan and Germany. The trip will introduce pickleball to potentially 40,000 Special Olympians through meetings with the local chapters. “This is the fastest-growing sport in America that nobody knows,” he says. “I talk to many people all over the place, and 80 to 90 percent have never even heard of pickleball. I’m trying to change that.” • FEBRUARY/MARCH 2020 | MAGAZINE 47