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The smell of a champion | Gonzalo Vilariño | TEDxRíodelaPlata

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    I opened a blind man's head.
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    I didn't make him think or reflect;
    I cracked his head open, literally.
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    He was walking grabbed by my shoulder,
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    I didn't correctly estimate
    the space between the two
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    and I made him hit against a gate.
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    (Laughter)
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    Five stitches on his forehead.
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    I felt the worst teacher in the world,
    I really didn't know how to apologize.
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    Luckily, El Pulga is one of those people
    who take things quite well.
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    And today he goes on saying
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    that I was the coach who left
    the most important mark in his career.
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    (Laughter)
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    The truth is that when I started working
    at the institute for the blind,
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    I was surprised by a lot of things.
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    A lot of things they did
    I didn't imagine they could:
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    they swim, do athletics, play cards,
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    drink mate, pour it themselves
    and don't get burned in the process.
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    But when I saw them playing soccer
    I found it amazing.
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    They had a field with two rusted goals
    and broken nets
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    and the blind who attended the institute
    would play their games there.
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    Just like I do in a vacant lot near home,
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    but there they were playing
    without being able to see.
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    The ball had a sound
    so they could locate it;
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    there was a guide
    behind the rival team's goal
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    to know where to kick ball,
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    and they used an eye mask.
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    There were kids who could still see
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    and to play under the same conditions
    they wore that eye mask.
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    When I got confident,
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    I asked for a mask myself,
    I put it on and tried to play;
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    I had played soccer all my life.
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    I found it more amazing still,
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    in two seconds didn't know
    where I was standing.
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    I had studied physical education
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    because I loved high performance.
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    I had started working there by chance.
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    My other job was
    with the Argentinian National Rowing Team,
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    and I felt that was my thing.
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    Here, everything took me double.
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    I'll never forget the first day
    I did the warm-up with the team.
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    I put them in front of me,
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    - I had a lot of experience
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    from when I worked
    with the national rowing team -
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    and I said, "Now, everyone down,"
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    and I did this. (He bends)
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    When I looked up, there were 2 seated,
    3 lying around, others squatted.
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    (Laughter)
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    How do I do here what I was doing there?
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    It took me a lot.
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    I started looking for tools,
    to learn from them,
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    from the teachers who work with them.
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    I learned that I couldn't explain a play
    on a chalkboard like a coach does,
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    but I could use a plastic tray with caps
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    so they could interpret me through touch.
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    I learned that they could also run
    on a running track
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    if I ran with them holding a rope.
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    Then we started looking for volunteers
    to help us run with them.
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    And I was enjoying it and I was finding
    the purpose and meaning to the activity.
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    It was difficult, it was uncomfortable,
    but I decided to overcome this discomfort.
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    And there came a time when it became
    the most fascinating job of all.
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    I think that's when I wondered,
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    why couldn't we be, with the blind,
    a high-performance team as well?
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    Of course, the other part was missing:
    to know what they wanted,
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    the real protagonists of this story.
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    Three hours of training on that field
    we played soccer on
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    were not going to be enough.
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    We would have to train differently.
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    We started to train harder
    and the results were great,
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    they asked for more.
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    I understood that they also wondered
    why they couldn't be high-performance.
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    When we felt ready,
    we knocked at CENARD's doors,
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    our National Center
    of High-Performance Sports
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    we have here in this country.
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    It was hard to have them open doors,
    but it was considerably more difficult
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    to get the other athletes training there
    to consider us their equals.
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    In fact, they would lend us the field
    only when no other teams used it.
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    And we were "the blind", not everyone knew
    what exactly we were doing there.
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    The 2006 World Championship
    was a turning point in the team's history.
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    It was held in Buenos Aires
    for the first time.
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    It was our chance to prove to our people
    what we had been doing all this time.
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    We made it to the final,
    we were growing as a team.
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    On the other hand, Brazil was leading,
    so far the best team in the tournament.
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    They were winning
    every game by a landslide.
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    Almost nobody believed
    that we could win that game.
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    Almost nobody, but us.
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    During training, in the locker room,
    during each warm-up,
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    there smelled of champions.
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    I swear that smell exists.
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    I smelled it several times with the team,
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    but I particularly remember the day
    before we played that final.
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    The Argentine Football Association
    had opened their doors to us
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    and we were preparing in AFA, where Verón,
    Higuain, and Messi train.
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    For us, it was feeling like
    a national team for the first time.
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    The day before at 7:30 pm, we were
    in the lounge during the technical talk
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    and a young man knocks on the door,
    interrupting our conversation,
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    suggesting us to go to church;
    he came to invite us to go to church.
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    I try to dissuade him, replying
    it was not the best of times,
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    that we better leave it for another day.
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    And he insists asking me to please
    let him take the kids to church
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    because that day a pastor came
    who performed miracles.
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    I asked with some fear
    what miracle he was talking about,
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    and he easily replied, "Coach,
    let me take the team to the church,
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    when we return
    I'm sure that half of them will see."
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    (Laughter)
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    Some laughed, but imagine
    you are blind and someone says that.
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    I didn't know what to say,
    I kept silent, an awkward silence.
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    I didn't want to make him feel bad
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    because he truly believed
    this could happen.
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    And one player saved me
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    when he stood up and confidently said,
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    "Juan, Gonza already told you
    it's not the best time to go to church.
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    Besides, let me make this clear:
    we get to go to that church,
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    and I'm part of those half
    of us who see when we return here,
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    I beat the shit out of you, for tomorrow
    I won't be able to play the game."
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    Juan left laughing in resignation,
    we continue with the technical talk,
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    and that night, when I went to sleep,
    I began to dream the next day's game,
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    to imagine what could happen,
    how we would play it.
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    And then I felt the smell of champions
    I mentioned a while ago.
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    Because at that moment I felt
    that if the other players had
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    the same desire Diego had to play
    that game, we could only be champions.
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    The next day was going to be wonderful.
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    We got up at 9 am, the game was at 7 pm,
    and we already wanted to go and play.
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    We left AFA, and the bus
    was full of flags given to us,
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    we were talking about the game
    and we could hear the honks,
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    and people cheering who were saying,
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    "Go Bats, today is the last day,
    the last effort."
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    The boys asked me, "Do they know us?
    Do they know we are playing?"
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    There were people who went
    to CENARD following the bus.
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    We arrived and found a pleasant scene.
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    Along the lane from the locker room
    to the game field
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    I was walking with Silvio, who grabbed
    by my shoulder, let me guide him;
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    fortunately, no gates on the way.
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    When we reached the field,
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    he was asking everything and everybody,
    he didn't want to miss a detail.
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    Then he said, "Tell me what you see,
    tell me who is playing those drums."
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    I tried to explain what was happening,
    with as much detail as possible.
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    I would say, "The stands are packed,
    a lot of people could not get in,
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    there are blue and white balloons
    all over the field,
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    they are opening a giant Argentina flag
    that covers the entire grandstand."
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    Suddenly, he cuts me off me and says,
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    "Do you see a flag that reads San Pedro?"
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    - the city where he lives -
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    and I start looking into the stands
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    and I find a little, white flag written
    in black spray paint that read,
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    "Silvio, your family
    and all San Pedro is here."
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    I tell him that and he replies,
    "That's my old lady,
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    tell me where she is,
    I want to I wave at her."
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    I orientate him, I show him,
    with his arm, where the flag is,
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    and he waves his two arms
    at that direction.
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    About 20, 30 people stand up
    to give him an ovation,
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    and when that happens, I see how his face
    changes, how moved he is.
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    It was moving for me too; 2 seconds later,
    I had a lump in my throat.
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    It was strange, because I felt
    the excitement of what was happening,
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    and the anger and the anguish
    that he could not see all this.
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    A few days later when I told him
    what had happened to me,
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    he was reassuring, because he said,
    "Gonza, don't feel bad,
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    I could see them, differently,
    but I swear to you I saw them all."
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    The game started;
    we could not fail, it was the final.
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    People had to stat still, like here,
    because in soccer, for the blind,
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    the public has to be quiet
    so that the players hear the ball.
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    And they are only allowed to cheer
    when the game is over.
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    About 8 minutes to go, they cheered
    what they hadn't in the first 32.
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    When Silvio nailed the ball at angle,
    they cheered that goal from the heart,
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    in an incredible way.
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    If today you go to CENARD, you will see
    a huge poster on the door,
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    with a Bats photo.
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    They are a model national team,
    everyone knows who they are in CENARD,
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    and after having won 2 World Championships
    and 2 Paralympic medals,
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    no one doubts they are high performance.
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    (Applause)
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    I was lucky to train
    this team for ten years,
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    first as trainer and later as their coach.
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    The feeling I have is that I received
    much more than I gave.
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    Last year I was suggested to coach
    another national team, Power Soccer.
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    It's a national team of young men
    who play soccer in wheelchairs.
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    Motorized wheelchairs
    that they drive with a joystick,
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    as they have no strength in their arms
    to drive a conventional chair.
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    They added a bumper to the chair,
    a safeguard that protects their feet
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    while allowing them to kick the ball.
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    It's the first time they stop being
    spectators and turned protagonists.
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    It's the first time that their parents,
    friends, and siblings go to see them play.
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    For me, it's a new challenge.
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    Again the discomfort, insecurity, and fear
    like when I started with the blind.
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    But I face it all
    from a more experienced position.
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    That's why from day one,
    I treat them as athletes on the field,
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    and I try to put myself
    in their place outside the field.
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    With no prejudice, because treating them
    naturally is how they feel best.
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    Both teams play soccer;
    it was something unthinkable for them.
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    They had to adapt the rules to do so.
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    And both teams broke the same rule,
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    precisely that which said
    they could not play soccer.
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    When you see them play,
    you see competition not disability.
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    The problem starts
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    when the game is over
    they leave the field,
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    and they come out to play our game
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    in a society that sets rules
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    that almost don't take them on account,
    that don't care for them.
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    I learned from sports
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    that disability greatly depends on
    the rules of the game.
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    So I think that if we change
    some of the rules of our game,
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    we can make their lives
    a little easier for them.
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    We all know that there are people
    with disabilities, we see them daily.
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    But by having no direct contact with them,
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    we are not aware of the problems
    they face every day.
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    How hard it is for them to get on a bus,
    find a job, take the subway,
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    or cross the street.
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    It's true that there is
    an increasing social responsibility
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    regarding the inclusion
    of people with disabilities.
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    But I think it's not enough yet.
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    I think change should come from within us.
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    First, by leaving behind
    the indifference towards them,
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    and then by respecting the rules
    that do take them on account.
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    They are few, but they exist.
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    I cracked a blind man's
    head open: El Pulga.
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    I can assure you these 2 teams
    also opened mine,
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    because they taught me
    how you have to get out there
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    and play every game
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    in the beautiful championship
    that life is.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The smell of a champion | Gonzalo Vilariño | TEDxRíodelaPlata
Description:

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences.

Gonzalo tells the story of how the National Football Team for the blind emerged. Gonzalo Vilariño is a lawyer and a Physical Education teacher but, above all, he's a professional challenge seeker. Proof of this is his coaching Argentina National Power Soccer Team and his incredible work as a trainer and a coach of the National Football Team for the blind called "Bats" that won no less than two World Championships and two Paralympic medals.

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Video Language:
Spanish
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
14:49

English subtitles

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