From bronze to Milano: Ben Tudhope and Australia’s road to the 2026 Winter Paralympics

From 6–15 March 2026, the world will turn its eyes to Milano Cortina for the Winter Paralympic Games. And Australia is heading there with a powerful, determined team across four disciplines: para-alpine skiing, para-snowboard, para-cross country and para-biathlon.
Leading the charge is dual Paralympic medallist Ben Tudhope, alongside team captain Sean Pollard.
For many Australians, the Winter Paralympics are about elite sport. But they are also about representation, resilience and reimagining what’s possible.
A team built on grit and talent
Australia’s 2026 Winter Paralympic team features a strong mix of experience and emerging talent.
Para-snowboard
Ben Tudhope (2022 Paralympic bronze medallist)
Sean Pollard
Amanda Reid
Aaron McCarthy
Blair Rosser
Para-alpine skiing
Josh Hanlon (World Cup medallist)
Georgia Gunew (with guide Ethan Jackson)
Liana France
Sam Tait
Para-nordic (biathlon and cross-country)
Lauren Parker
Dave Miln
Lynn-Maree Cullen
With Chef de Mission Ben Troy and captain Sean Pollard providing leadership, the team heads into Milano Cortina with both confidence and clarity of purpose.
Backed by more than $2 million in Australian Government funding to support preparation, training and performance, these athletes are not just participating. They are competing to win.
Why this matters beyond the podium
When athletes like Ben Tudhope line up at the start gate, something bigger happens.
Young people with disability see someone who looks like them in a high-performance environment. Families see possibility. Communities see strength, skill and dedication rather than limitation.
Sport can be transformative. It builds confidence, independence, community connection and physical wellbeing. It challenges stereotypes and expands what society believes is achievable.
At helpz, we see this same transformation every day in different ways. Whether through allied health support, behaviour support, occupational
therapy, speech pathology or creative therapies, our work is about enabling people to participate fully in life.
For some, that might mean the Paralympics.
For others, it might mean joining a local sports club, learning a new skill, returning to school with confidence or navigating everyday challenges with greater independence.
Every goal matters.
The road to Milano Cortina
Preparation for the Winter Paralympics is intense. It requires physical endurance, mental resilience, technical precision and strong support networks.
Behind every athlete is a team of coaches, clinicians, families and supporters. Behind every run is years of training.
As we head towards March 2026, we’ll be cheering for Ben and the entire Australian team. Not just for medals, but for what they represent.
Courage.
Capability.
Community.
And a powerful reminder that disability does not define potential
We can’t wait to see what they achieve on the snow.
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